Before the Fire Dogs Steal the Sun
An Elegy
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Duke University Press
Publishing:28th Apr '26
£19.99
This title is due to be published on 28th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£86.00(9781478033769)

In Before the Fire Dogs Steal the Sun, Crystal Mun-hye Baik offers an intimate cultural history of war, illness, banishment, and estrangement through the experiential lens of her family. Beginning with her father's death and mother's psychiatric hold in 2022, Baik situates her parents’ lives within the enmeshed narratives of Japanese colonialism, war, and transoceanic migration, examining Korean diasporic grief as a felt form of thinking and writing, rather than an object of study. In doing so, she reckons with diasporic genealogies of precarity that have configured the everyday lives of her parents and ancestral communities. Blending different genres from narrative prose to visual essay, epistles to ancestral mourning rites, Before the Fire Dogs Steal the Sun is a meditation on the personal and ethical entanglements scholars must confront when they are implicated in the histories of violence they study.
“In Before the Fire Dogs Steal the Sun, Baik balances research and storytelling with expert precision. Her beautifully crystalline prose illuminates the historical depth of intimate lives and the personal stakes of social experiences. Sentence after sentence, insight after insight, this elegy grips the reader and holds them in communal embrace until the very last word. A monumental achievement.”—Vinh Nguyen, author of The Migrant Rain Falls in Reverse
“Although rooted in Baik’s deeply personal experience—her mother’s painful break from reality after her husband’s death—reading this book felt like looking into a mirror. A gift to all of us shaped by militarized diasporas and the unfinished business of war, Before the Fire Dogs Steal the Sun: An Elegy moves between memoir and cultural analysis with power and grace. In the wake of profound loss, Baik pieces together a diasporic family history from makeshift archives scattered across borders and time, offering a speculative yet searingly candid account. This is a brilliant work—moving, engaging, and quietly radical. It will stay with you, and in the best way, restore you.”—Jinah Kim, author of Postcolonial Grief: The Afterlives of the Pacific Wars in the Americas
ISBN: 9781478038641
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 445g
176 pages