The Korean Literature Night (KLN) is a monthly discussion group that explores various themes and topics relating to that month’s chosen book.

In March we will have a special event as a part of our Korean Literature Night (KLN) with author Yun Ko-Eun and this event will be presented at the KCCUK.

Author Yun Ko-Eun will join us for a discussion about her work 'The Disaster Tourist', a satirical Korean eco-thriller with a fierce feminist sensibility. The talk will be moderated by Sharlene Teo. Following the talk, Yun Ko-Eun will respond to questions from the audience.


Event Details

  • Date: 31 March 2023, 7-8:30pm
  • Venue: Korean Cultural Centre UK (Offline event)
  • Free - Booking Essential, Register to Eventbrite page to apply

The Disaster Tourist

Yona has been stuck behind a desk for years working as a programming coordinator for Jungle, a travel company specialising in package holidays to destinations ravaged by disaster. When a senior colleague touches her inappropriately she tries to complain, and in an attempt to bury her allegations, the company make her an attractive proposition: a free ticket for one of their most sought-after trips, to the desert island of Mui.

She accepts the offer and travels to the remote island, where the major attraction is a supposedly-dramatic sinkhole. When the customers who've paid a premium for the trip begin to get frustrated, Yona realises that the company has dangerous plans to fabricate an environmental catastrophe to make the trip more interesting, but when she tries to raise the alarm, she discovers that she has put her own life in danger.

Yun Ko-Eun

Yun Ko-Eun is the author of several novels and short story collections published in Korea. Her short story 'Piercing' won the Daesan Literary Award for College Students the year she graduated from university. She received the 2008 Hankyoreh Literature Award for her novel The Zero G Syndrome and in 2015 her short story collection Aloha won the Kim Yong Ik Novel Prize. "The Disaster Tourist," was named the winner of the Crime Fiction in Translation Dagger category, awarded by the Crime Writers' Association (CWA) in the UK in 2021.

Sharlene Teo

Sharlene Teo is author of the novel Ponti (2018), which won the inaugural Deborah Rogers Writer’s Award. She is the recipient of the 2012 UEA Booker Prize Foundation scholarship, 2013 David TK Wong Creative Writing fellowship, 2014 Sozopol Fiction fellowship and 2017 University of Iowa International Writing fellowship.

@book cover image credit: designer Sinem Erkas, Publisher Serpent's Tail