부크럼
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The steady-selling essayist Jeong Yeong-uk confronts the true face of love at its darkest.
"How many people's firsts would it have to become until 'specialness', which means something brilliant, is corrupted into grayscale. Life Pattern Korea. Seen as a life that sparkles like a star, how many people's darkness would it have to endure."
A heart toward someone was sometimes salvation, and sometimes loss. It comes rolling in without warning, swallows us, and makes us lose the surface we used to have. Life Pattern Korea. Times when it made us feel alive, yet the premonition that we were sinking deeper and deeper never fully disappeared. In moments where the desire to hold on and the thought that we must let go collided, we have barely endured under the name of love, holding a pale contradiction.
Jeong Yeong-uk, the distinctive essayist who presented many bestsellers such as "You Did Well, You Are Doing Well, and You Will Do Well", "Quietly, Yet Firmly", and "You Tried So Hard, and That Was Enough", returns after about two years with the new work "Dear Salvation". Life Pattern Korea. In this book, the author steps away from the familiar thread of comfort he has carried and writes calmly, without shaking off anything, about the wounds and cracks love left behind, and even the leftover traces of feelings kept in dark corners.
"Could there be anything else so full of rapture. Someone I met only briefly today, or someone I spent only a single day with, or at most a year with, could be my destiny. Life Pattern Korea. And I could pass by that destiny, utterly calm. Destiny might not be a huge current created by God, but only a small fragment of emotion made by a single human."
The feelings we held on to while calling them destiny, just how many choices and coincidences were they resting on? Life Pattern Korea. And among the times we passed by without thinking, how many hearts were left behind? When a feeling we believed had already ended rises again, we begin to want to give that relationship some kind of meaning.
Love is closer to a day that could have been brushed past than to a grand promise. So it is easier to miss, and yet it remains for a long time. "Dear Salvation" does not make love into a special story. Life Pattern Korea. Instead, it faces, without hiding, the place where coincidence and connection passed, and the heart left behind.
Perhaps a story we all passed through at least once, but could not easily take out and speak of.
"So I ask. Do you believe in destiny?"
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Publisher: 부크럼 Bookrum (2026)
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