Exhibit, R. O. Kwon
Exhibit, R. O. Kwon
List: $17.50 | Sale: $12.25
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Exhibit

Author: R. O. Kwon

Narrator: Ami Park, Sue Jean Kim

Unabridged: 5 hr 18 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Penguin Audio

Published: 05/21/2024


Synopsis

NATIONAL BESTSELLER

NEW YORK TIMES EDITORS' CHOICE

NAMED A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY VOGUE, ELLE, AND ELECTRIC LITERATURE

WINNER OF THE LAMBDA LITERARY DUGGINS PRIZE

"Hypnotic...a haunting romance about desire, obsession, and ambition that is sure to get your heart rate up." —Time Magazine

"R.O. Kwon’s Exhibit is, hands down, the sexiest novel of the year." —Vogue

"A highly sensory experience...lingers like a mysterious, multihued bruise." —The New York Times

"One of the most buzzed-about books of the year…fiery, sexual, and undeniably original." —Poets & Writers

From bestselling author R. O. Kwon, an exhilarating, blazing-hot novel about a woman caught between her desires and her life.

At a lavish party in the hills outside of San Francisco, Jin Han meets Lidija Jung and nothing will ever be the same for either woman. A brilliant young photographer, Jin is at a crossroads in her work, in her marriage to her college love Philip, and in who she is and who she wants to be. Lidija is an alluring, injured world-class ballerina on hiatus from her ballet company under mysterious circumstances. Drawn to each other by their intense artistic drives, the two women talk all night.

Cracked open, Jin finds herself telling Lidija about an old familial curse, breaking a lifelong promise. She's been told that if she doesn’t keep the curse a secret, she risks losing everything; death and ruin could lie ahead. As Jin and Lidija become more entangled, they realize they share more than the ferocity of their ambition, and begin to explore hidden desires. Something is ignited in Jin: her art, her body, and her sense of self irrevocably changed. But can she avoid the specter of the curse? Vital, bold, powerful, and deeply moving, Exhibit asks: how brightly can you burn before you light your life on fire?

About The Author

R. O. Kwon is the author of the nationally bestselling novel The Incendiaries, which was named a best book of the year by more than forty publications and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle John Leonard Award. With Garth Greenwell, Kwon coedited the bestselling Kink, a New York Times Notable Book. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and elsewhere. She has received fellowships and awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, Yaddo, and MacDowell. Born in Seoul, Kwon has lived most of her life in the United States.


Reviews

Goodreads review by emma on December 01, 2024

if a book has a low average rating, is categorized as lit fic, and is about a woman destroying her life...i'm in. even if i should be out. i think there's a thin line between masterfully mysterious lit fic and deliberately obtuse, underedited lit fic. i badly wanted to make this into the former but it......more

Goodreads review by Meike on June 15, 2024

For the life of me, I could not get into this: There is so much packed into Kwon's second novel, both aesthetically and when it comes to themes, that the text appears to be constantly pulled apart by centrifugal forces. What's the center, you ask? Well, that's the next problem: Religion? A marriage......more

Goodreads review by luce (cry bebè's back from hiatus) on January 27, 2025

2 ½ stars for something that had the potential of being subversive this struck me as very vanilla and delivery wise cold. the novel tries to be cerebral but i found the author's use of random high-brow or obscure words a gimmick. still, the novel's clinical mood isn't wholly ineffective and i did ap......more

Goodreads review by Lupita on March 04, 2024

Jin is a photographer married to Philip, her college sweetheart. She feels safe with Philip and loved by him yet there’s a disconnect between them that begins to grow when the topic of whether they’ll have children or not comes up. Philip imagines his life as a father while at times Jin can’t stomac......more

Goodreads review by Queralt✨ on May 18, 2024

I’m one of the few people who enjoyed R.O. Kwon’s debut novel, The Incendiaries, so you can imagine how thrilled I was to pick up Exhibit. This new novel is as similar as it is extremely different from her first book, it’s one of these quiet literary fiction novels where very big things happen, but......more


Quotes

Praise for Exhibit

"A hypnotic queer love story full of lust and longing...a haunting romance about desire, obsession, and ambition that is sure to get your heart rate up." —Time Magazine

"R. O. Kwon’s Exhibit is, hands down, the sexiest novel of the year...her examination of kink, desire, shame, lust and the liminal space we enter when we finally stop denying ourselves...makes Exhibit uniquely successful and powerfully sexy." —Vogue

"Bewitching." —People Magazine

"A highly sensory experience, awash in petals and colors, smells and flavors, that adds to the literature on a proclivity much discussed and often misunderstood. It lingers like a mysterious, multihued bruise." The New York Times

"Kwon is a deeply sensual writer...The idea of a divided self, a way of half-living, defines this book. Even the meaning of the title suggests an art exhibit, of course, but also the question of what we show with our lives. What kind of story do we tell others, and more important, ourselves?" The Washington Post

"Kwon’s poetic prose gilds a narrative that tightly weaves together myth, self-exploration, and artistic ambition." The New Yorker

"Pulses with the queer desire of Korean women, past and present." —San Francisco Chronicle

“An expansive view of the things women are punished for wanting…unflinching." —The Atlantic

“One of the most buzzed-about books of the year…fiery, sexual, and undeniably original.” —Poets & Writers

"Kwon is one of the finest stylists of her generation...the savage beauty and intensity of the prose gets under your skin, lingering like the bruises Lidija leaves on Jin." —Literary Review

"R. O. Kwon extracts hidden, taboo desires with precision, and her hair-raising prose sizzles...Your stomach might lurch and your heart might beat faster as you enter Jin’s inner monologue of suppressed wants bursting at the seams." —KQED

"A searing study of art, desire, and bodily and intellectual freedom...Kwon's sentences are like grenades, carefully wrought and concentrated with meaning." —Shelf Awareness

"Kwon’s prose is unlike any other, sensuous and sumptuous and yet razor-sharp." —Electric Literature

"In a hypnotic, sensual stream of consciousness...Kwon explores an intimacy that grows into obsession, revealing insights into the nature of power, sexuality, and free will." —Bustle

"An exhilarating novel about being caught between the desires of the future and the specters of the past." —Nylon

"Muscular and intelligent...A bold, tough novel that invites the viewer’s gaze and stares defiantly back." —Kirkus

"Displays, in stark relief, the patterns created by what we repress, what we celebrate, and how we transform shame into joy: it’s exquisitely curated and terrifically complicated." —Chicago Review of Books

"R. O. Kwon, bless her, takes religion seriously...For Kwon, religion names experience at the border of the speakable and unspeakable, the personal and the public. Her novels understand that we lean on what renders us unsteady, that desire inhabits a realm reason can only glimpse...Kwon’s understanding of this strange relationship between belief and unbelief places her alongside, of all people, Ludwig Wittgenstein." —The Los Angeles Review of Books

“R. O. Kwon writes stunningly about the hunger for transcendence, for something larger than oneself, more encompassing than society...Exhibit feels intended to free readers. It is a novel that makes profound and singular and visible private experiences often considered askance in American fiction, when they are considered at all. The effect is of a kind of openness, a nuanced patterning of shadow and light.” —Alta

“R. O. Kwon puts queer love, loss and faith on 'exhibit' in [her] new novel...The incisive mining of these inner conflicts and identity crises—how to exist in a society that expects you to be a God-fearing, family-oriented woman, when such labels no longer apply—is a throughline fearlessly explored by Kwon.” —CNN

“A lyrical, sensual exploration of the relationship between two Korean American women—Jin, a photographer, and Lidija, a ballet dancer—who meet at a party and soon establish bonds both creative and sexual.” —Boston Globe

“In prose at once sharp and lush, Kwon crafts a gripping tale of a woman wrestling with the past, while boldly making her own future. A haunting and powerful exploration of art, racism, feminism, and desire, this novel will stay with me a long time.”
—Madeline Miller, New York Times bestselling author of Circe and The Song of Achilles

Exhibit is sensational – a novel that's both intimate and operatic, singular and world-encompassing. Kwon's prose is soulful and piercing, chronicling the many ways we lose and find ourselves, blending love and sex and fables between the infinite folds that encompass desire. Exhibit is entirely captivating, and Kwon is truly masterful; it's a book for the mind and the heart and the body, an actual tour de force.”
—Bryan Washington, bestselling author of Family Meal and Memorial

Exhibit is extraordinary: brisk, jolting, brilliant, beautiful, true. A ghost story, a tale of passion, a captivating portrait of how art is made, it turns myths upside down, assumptions inside out, all in the most exquisite prose in the bookstore. Kwon is one of the finest American writers, and her latest is a must for all readers.”
—Andrew Sean Greer, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Less is Lost

"I tore through this. Exhibit explores how obliteration can be a kind of rebirth, how the nuances of that are complicated by the constraints of chosen and socially imposed identities. Kwon writes about art and ardor with urgency."
—Raven Leilani, New York Times bestselling author of Luster

"A rare jewel of a book, at once forceful and unrepentant, delicate and shimmering. R. O. Kwon carves language into a wondrous, jagged thing, revealing facets of desire usually hidden. To read Exhibit is to feel time slow down."
—C Pam Zhang, bestselling author of How Much of These Hills Is Gold and Land of Milk and Honey