Writing and reactions Kim was working as a journalist at the
Marin Independent Journal and living in
San Rafael, California, when literary agent Patti Breitman approached her about the possibility of writing a memoir. Kim was initially reluctant, but Breitman slowly convinced her of the idea; Breitman herself says that publishers were quite enthusiastic about the idea, and one even replied to her proposal within a day, simply asking her to "name a price". In the end, Kim received an advance of hundreds of thousands of dollars for her book; when it was published in May 2000, Kim quit her job at the
Marin Independent Journal (despite her recent promotion to city editor) to tour in
Canada, the
United Kingdom, and the
United States. Andrea Behr, writing for the
San Francisco Chronicle, praised Kim's writing, comparing her book to
Frank McCourt's ''
Angela's Ashes'', and stating that "she has the gift of telling her story with such clear-sighted, humble honesty, and such compassion, that it's just as fascinating and compulsively readable as it is devastating". It was also reviewed favorably in
O,
Oprah Winfrey's magazine. Others were less positive. Salon reviewer Brigitte Frase described Kim's book as "brutal", "haunting and disturbing", and "an act of revenge", ending her review by stating that "I have read it so that you won't have to". It was particularly controversial in the
Korean American community, some of whose members accused Kim of "exploiting the issue of biraciality" and "trying to take advantage of the [then] current interest in autobiographies, particularly those that involved violence against women". Others objected to the description of her mother's murder as an "honor killing" as being inconsistent with Korean culture.
Reviews • Koji Nnamdi, WAMU • Seiwoong Oh,
Western American Literature • Susan Soon-Keum Cox,
Adoption Quarterly • Tracy Dianne Wood, Ph.D. dissertation, U.C. Riverside
Editions and translations Ten Thousand Sorrows was published in the following editions: • • Audiobook (read by the author): • United Kingdom edition: It was translated into eleven languages. The below list gives unofficial translations of the foreign-language titles where the original title was not preserved. •
Chinese: •
Dutch: •
Danish: •
Finnish: •
German: •
Hungarian: •
Korean: •
Turkish: •
Italian: •
Japanese: •
Polish: Further editions were published in two of those languages: • German paperback: • Hungarian paperback: ==References==