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Starry Field: A Memoir of Lost History

Review

Starry Field: A Memoir of Lost History

In STARRY FIELD, Margaret Juhae Lee offers an international yet intimate account of a family member whose life would have been lost in a sea of forgetfulness were it not for her diligent dedication to discovering the truth --- a truth that brings honor and hope to those remaining.

The daughter of Korean immigrants, a young Lee never felt that she was where she wanted or needed to be. She always tried to explain to schoolmates that she was American, while their perception of her features told them she must be from somewhere else. Added to this sense of discomfiture was the fact that her father, Eun Sul, knew little of his own father, Lee Chul Ha. Her grandmother, Halmoni, refused to speak of him, leaving a blank space in her comprehension of her heritage.

"STARRY FIELD will attract a wide readership --- those who feel deprived of a true home and may be inspired like Lee to seek emotional refuge, and those who will admire and share the tale of one woman’s courageous sentiments and her willingness to act upon them."

Despite these deficits, Lee proved to be an achiever, completing higher education with honors and becoming a noted journalist. Her natural bent to find facts led her to partner with her father in an investigation into the life of her grandfather and the mystery surrounding his passing in a Japanese prison at a time when Korea was occupied by that brutal dictatorship.

What they learn will change their perspective, even that of Halmoni, who had been told that her young husband died as a traitor. Facts found in the few official papers combined with family lore revealed a very different reason for his death, which has resulted in fresh recognition by Lee and her family, as well as by the current Korean government. Interwoven into her journey of discovery is Lee’s personal journaling, putting her in vivid focus as a student, a romantic and a mother.

Lee, the former editor of The Nation, is a highly regarded wordsmith who has received many distinguished awards. Here she utilizes her talents in myriad ways to show the child within longing for a spiritual and emotional home, and the sharp-minded young woman with an ever-growing need to learn more about her family’s history. In so doing, she connects far more deeply with her birth family. Her work evinced in Halmoni the urge to revitalize her mothering skills, rewarded her father with knowledge of a father whom he could honor as a hero, and gifted to herself --- the self-proclaimed “girl who was born in a country where she didn’t feel at home” --- a sense of genuine pride and security that she can pass on to her children.

STARRY FIELD will attract a wide readership --- those who feel deprived of a true home and may be inspired like Lee to seek emotional refuge, and those who will admire and share the tale of one woman’s courageous sentiments and her willingness to act upon them.

Reviewed by Barbara Bamberger Scott on March 9, 2024

Starry Field: A Memoir of Lost History
by Margaret Juhae Lee

  • Publication Date: March 5, 2024
  • Genres: Memoir, Nonfiction
  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Melville House
  • ISBN-10: 1685890938
  • ISBN-13: 9781685890933