Friday 30 March 2012

Catcher in the Rye - Adaptation by Minsun Park



Back to myself






I left KMLA a month ago. Actually, I was kicked out of it because I exceeded 80 points, the limitation the school said it could ‘take’. All I did was I ordered some chicken when I really wanted to eat some, didn’t clean my room because I was out having a barbecue party, brushed my teeth or ate some squid during the self study time, skipped the morning exercise because nobody woke me up and stuff. I didn’t go to court because I committed a crime; I was just being myself.

Even Mr.
Ganse agreed with me. I visited Mr. Ganse just before I left the school, and I immediately started to like him a little bit more because he talked about how much improvement I’ve made throughout my school years, and the school cannot be more stupid to just let me go like this, just because of those penalty points, which is not even important in our lives.



I immediately went to a place where I can learn music, as I’ve always wanted. I’ve wanted to learn music composition, guitar and more piano. I really missed singing all the time and playing the piano. It’s been quite a while since I really enjoyed music itself. I’ve been stressed by all the performances I had to do successfully every time, just for the good of my NAB club.





I could finally learn professional music, by a professional musician, Mrs. Grendell.
She is such a nasty person, but a great musician, though. When I first came to this place, she required so much money so that I couldn’t learn from her. I begged her for like a week until she finally accepted me. I think she did that because I was driving her crazy, following everywhere she went, trying to convince her that I was eligible to become her student. Again, she was extremely harsh on me the minute I became her student. Every time I learned a little thing, she scolded me for not knowing it. Her voice was always in maximum volume, probably due to her outstanding singing ability, and with that huge voice, she shouted right into my ears. However, what mattered was not her voice, but the humiliation I got every time she shouted at me. It was always in front of everybody else whenever she scolded me, with the great combination of such hurtful words. Every night, I cried with my face buried in my pillow, for I didn’t want anybody to hear me. But then I comforted myself, telling myself I could someday be a great musician. The same thing happened to me every day, so I eventually got dull with such harsh scoldings.



Yet, I was holding on to my only hope; becoming an international musician, until I heard the news that a selected trainee at SM entertainment, a student of Mrs.
Grendell, was excluded from the group she was supposed to join.The reason I was shocked at the news was because she was, in a nutshell, ‘perfect’. She had been a trainee at SM for over 6 years now, and I recognized her as soon as I came in, as the most talented student of Mrs. Grendell. I didn’t understand why she was excluded. She simply had everything; fantastic voice, greatest dancing skills and one of the most beautiful faces I’ve ever seen. She said her boss told her she didn’t have ‘potential’ to succeed in the entertainment world.
Well, she didn’t need potential; she already ‘had’ everything! I was infuriated at the news, but at the same time, gave another thought about my future. Until last month, I was in KMLA, the so-called the most prestigious high school in Korea. I was enjoying the school life along with all my extra-curricular activities, got fairly nice GPA, wanting to be a marine biologist. I was working on it, but then I suddenly deviated from my ‘path’, towards music, which I’m not really an expert in. I was an idiot.



Now I realize studying is the easiest way to have a better life in the future, especially if you're not particularly talented in an area that you can kick everybody's asses without much effort, or you would die for working in that area.



대치동, 10:10 pm 학원가 by Kim Jinju


대치동, 10:10 pm 학원가
 After the government made this stupid law that prohibits 학원 classes after 10 pm, there is always heavy traffic right after 10 o’ clock on the two big vertical roads in 대치동. The politicians are GD phonies. They just had nothing to do so went ahead and made this law. They think we students worship them as our saviors and heroes and they seem proud of what they have ‘achieved.’ They could not have been more ignorant.
Anyways, back to the point: I had this boring science 학원 class until 10. The teacher thinks ‘the world is governed by the ‘laws of physics’ but if the world is governed by “principles and laws” it won’t be such a crazy place as it is now. And it won’t be so full of phonies. We kind of learned something about Newton’s laws which didn’t seem to fit very well to our world anyway. But I do love math. Teachers say I quite have the right genes of a mathematician. They are one of the few people I know that seem to know what they are talking about. Sometimes, I sit down at my desks and take two theorems and combine them. It’s quite fun actually, because there are so many different possibilities and variations that you can make.
After class ends asking your mom to give you a ride home is just crazy because the road is full of 극성 mom’s who want to get their children home as soon as possible. So, instead, I always walk home. On the way, I saw a thousand plastic surgery advertisement posters. I’m a girl too, but personally, I think it’s simply complete madness to reshape your own face with those horrible knives. It’s not that you get any prettier. But today, I saw this really weird poster that read “We guarantee your happiness. A better look, a fresh new start.” This suddenly made me angry. It was not right. Everyone was unique, or so we learned at school. We shouldn’t have to care so much about what others think of my appearance.
Finally, when I did reach home, my brother had just come back from school. He goes to 대원외고 and he comes home quite late sometimes. My brother is the only person who can understand what I tell him. I try to share my thoughts with other, like my mom, but it doesn’t always work out well. All they do is sigh and tell me “I’m not acting my age.” Maybe I’m not. But it doesn’t matter. I don’t give a SH.
My brother heard me come in and came to me. “ How was your day?” I answered “ As always. We did this cool thing in math class where you can find the area of a weird shaped figure…” “Integral Calculus?” “Yeah, that’s it. It’s so much better than Newton’s laws.. I think..”  “How about other subjects? English?” “English was okay. We didn’t do grammar. I hate RULES…” “ Hey Liz, you look gloomier today. Tell me what’s wrong specifically. “ “I just can’t stand it. Rules, Rules. They tell me to follow them but these rules just make me mad. And I saw this stupid poster about plastic surgery. I don’t know….” “It’s not going to help you if you just complain about things. Study your favorite subjects and build up 내공!! In the end when you go out to the society, you may have the influence to change things the way you want them to be.”

Adaptation by Sunmo Kwon


The Catcher in the Rye
     If you really want to know about it, the first think you’ll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my tangles childhood was like, and how my parents tried to make me always be under their control. But I’m not gonna tell my goddam biography or anything. I’ll just tell you what happened to me in last autumn just before I experienced something goddam terrible..
     Where I want to start the story is the day I left KMLA. KMLA is this school in HoengSeong, Gangwon province. You’ve probably heard of it especially if you’re nerd. You’ve seen the picture of students wearing weird and traditional costumes, probably the ones with long ribbons in the front, I bet. The news is all about nerdy students going to goddam great universities, getting awards from different contests and so on. People around me never did. What the hell am I listening about from all these people?
     Anyway, it was a peaceful Saturday morning. Our school had a basketball match with Chungshim. All the Crossover guys were damn excited since it was a very big matter of pride. In fact, they would commit suicide or anything if their pride is lost. I remember I was in front of the Pasteur factory. From there, you can go up to the gym or head for Dasan or Chungmu building. I could hear people yelling and shouting with such fervor. There were never many girls at all at any sports match. Only gits came, talking about online games they played last night. It was supposed to be a coed school, but the reality sucked. There was nothing I could enjoy with girls, also because I did not enjoy doing what girls like to do. OK. But that day, this girl sat next to me. She was a pretty nice girl, and friendly to talk with. Sitting next to her was quite pleasing except the fact that she was ‘officially’ the girlfriend of a crossover guy. But I liked her. She had a pink palm and a glossy hair.
      The reason why I was in front of the Pasteur factory instead of in the gym was because I’d just got back from Seoul with the volleyball team. I was the goddam manager of the volleyball team. Very big deal. We’d gone in to Seoul that morning for this volleyball match with Daewon. Only, we didn’t have the meet. I messed my way up when heading for Daewon school after arriving at Seoul. It was not my fault because the bus driver stopped at the wrong place.
     Oh! I forgot to tell you about that. They kicked me out. I wasn’t supposed to come back after the winter break, on account of I was the last 10% of two-thirds of all the subjects for three times in a row. Well, KMLA has a good rating. It really does.

Adaptation by Hee Eun Moon


 Once a month, the school gives us chickens. We call that day ‘Chicken Day’. It’s usually on the last Wednesday of the month. But if you were expecting hot and fresh chickens delievered to your room, all I can say to you is that KMLA is not friendly to the students at all. They rather make us work. Literally, all they do for us is making a purchase of 200 chicken boxes, 120 bottles of coke, and chilie sauce. All the other jobs like distributing chickens and cleaning up leftovers are left to the students, especially those who are in the department of food and nutrition. I am one of those unlucky fellas. Most of ‘food’ students got in the department of food and nutrition not because they choosed to, but because they failed to get into the other department. So the executive council assigned those students to the department of food and nutrition. Those council members are total phonies. They think they can change the world. In the beginning of the semester, they always come up with some new ideas and helluva lot of plans, but they never follow those.
 This department thing is pretty messed up. The executive council gives too much duties to the food department. We have to watch over students’ plate and give penalty sticker to those who left food on their plates. And we also have to do all the chores for the chicken day. I mean, why on earth should I spend my time staring at disgusting plates and tell students to eat up their disgusting leftovers? Seriously, this is just simply not right. And Chicken Day is no better than that. To be honest, it’s worse. We have to wear gloves and clean up the chicken bones that have been licked all over. It is true that we do wear gloves, but those gloves are goddamn weak. It’s like the weakest gloves that I’ve ever seen in my entire life. It gets torn apart too easily. We do wear gloves before we ever touch bones and garbages, but we always end up with our hands stained with chicken oil. 
 Yesterday was goddamn Chicken Day. I didn’t know. I knew it was the last Wednesday of March, but I just didn’t notice it was Chicken Day. Maybe I wanted to avoid the fact that I was to be disgusted soon. I don’t know. So I spent the first self-study period doing almost nothing. I tried to study physics, but this biot-something equation and other crazy electro-magnetic stuff knocked me out. I felt dizzy and tired, so I climbed up to my bed and slept for half an hour. Sleeping during the self-study periods is against the self-study regulation, and of course I knew that; but I just couldn’t resist. Besides, my bed is at the darkest corner of our room. If you place your blanket over your entire body, nobody will ever notice that you are there.
 So I woke up around 20:30s. Sitting on my bed, I turned my cellphone on. 14 missed calls. Then I figured out that I was late. The chief of the food department told me to come by 20:00 to do some chicken works. But I didn’t feel like I was doomed or some crappy bird poop fell on me. Instead, I felt I was lucky. Lucky to be free from chickens. Lucky to be exempt from phonies shouting at me to do this and do that. Especially the chief. He is one of the most impressive jerk that I’ve ever met. He loves Confucius. Fifty percent of what he talks is from those ancient Chinese fellas. I think he believes that reducing leftover food and cleaning up the chicken bones will make him a saint like Confucius.
 I walked up to the 12th floor anyway. The chief was angry at me, but I didn’t care. I decided to help a 10th grader. I found one trying desperately to gather chickens for students living in the 7th floor. I live in the 7th floor, so I thought why not. She was quite short and fat, and her face was pale and round like a grizzly bear. It would have been nice if she was smart or at least quiet. She kept confusing between fried chickens and lean chickens. So I had to check 30 boxes of chickens to see if she did right. And 10 boxes had to be switched. God, she was so damn ignorant. I couldn’t stand her being so phony, so I made excuses and came down to my room. My roommates were already gone for Honjeong, so I just sat on my chair and opened up my laptop. On Facebook, everyone seemed to be terribly exicited. I wanted to make comments on their statuses so bad, but I didn’t. All I wanted to say to them was to come and get their asses on the top of the huge pile of chicken bones after swallowing chickens or make sure to take care of their disgusting chickens and clean up, for Chrissake.

Catcher in the Looking Glass - By Joelle Jung


This is a piece of chapter 3. It’s when Holden returns to his room after his encounter with his teacher, and hangs out with Ackley. In my sample he’s not exactly Holden, but a Korean alternate-universe Holden, I guess.

I’m the most terrific liar you ever saw in your whole life. It’s awful. If I’m on my way to the study hall on the 11th floor and someone asks me where I’m going, I’m liable to say that I’m going to the cafeteria. It’s terrible. So when I told old Park I had to grab my kendo swords from the gym, that was a sheer lie. I don’t even take kendo in the morning.
           The morning exercises they make you do here are a bit of a nuisance. I take tae kwon-do because I just like it—the other option was kendo, but the whole sword-waving business always struck me as slightly stupid—but boy, you should see what a big deal they make of it here in KMLA. What a deal! They blast this really loud music through the dorm speakers at six in the morning every day, just to wake you up and all, and usually it’s this guy from some indie band singing all sweetly about love and stuff. It’s not half bad if you listen to it some other time in the day, maybe, but at six in the goddamn morning it makes you want to carve your eardrums out. What’s worse is that they play it so goddamn loud that it makes the speakers crackle like hell, and you can’t even hear the music over the noise. It’s awful. Anyway, after making sure you’re awake and all, they make you go down to the gym for morning exercise. Tae kwon-do is done in the gym basement. Old Mr. Seong teaches it, and he damn near pitches a fit if you’re not there on time. Seriously, he threatens to lock the door on you and all after 6:30, which is when we have to be there. But I never saw him actually do it. He’s really quite a nice guy, Mr. Seong. I was sort of on friendly terms with him before they gave me the sack. I’d even guess he was kinda sorry when he heard the news. In any case, the other guys who take tae kwon-do complain about it something terrible. The whole school complains about morning exercise, actually. Personally I don’t mind it too much. It gives me some time to think in the morning, when I’m walking to the gym and all. But the huge fuss they make about it, that’s what kills me. A few weeks ago some guys from KBS came with their cameras to film a documentary about our school, and wanted footage of us doing morning exercise, ‘cause that’s what makes our school special or something. Old Seong just about lost his mind. He made extra sure that we were standing perfectly in line, that our actions were all synchronized and stuff, and started acting like some grand guy who cares about the “spirit of tae kwon-do” and all that phony crap. It damn near made me puke, except that during filming, something happened. This guy that stands in front of me in tae kwon-do, Min-jun, laid this great fart right when the camera was going past us. Boy, it ripped right through the whole basement! We couldn’t really laugh that hard because old Seong looked like he was going to breathe fire, but that made my day, it really did. The next day, though, Seong made us stay an extra fifteen minutes after morning exercise to deliver this furious speech, about how the guy that did it wasn’t fit to go to KMLA and all. We tried to get Min-jun to do it again in the middle of the speech but he wasn’t in the right mood. Anyway, they showed us the documentary on the big TV in the cafeteria a few days later, but KBS edited out that bit with Min-jun farting. It’s a shame, ‘cause I would have liked to hear the phony commentator woman say something about it. They would have found a way to make even a fart sound like a goddamn prince’s trumpet. You should see what they say about our school in the media. It would make you puke, it really would. According to them we’re all some sort of geniuses that are having a grand old time out in the mountains, studying to lead the future of this nation and all that crap. The leadership thing really kills me. It really does. No one does any more leading here than they do in any other school. And the handful of guys that do probably came here that way.
           After that icy trek from the teachers’ dorm, it was nice to get back into my own room again. Everybody was down at the night concert and the heating was on full blast. It was kind of cosy. I took off my hanbok, then put on this red hat that I’d bought from Dongdaemun Market a few months ago. It was one of those knitted caps that looked like they were thrown together by some old granny who was going blind and couldn’t see too well anymore, and the stitchings were off in some parts. I’d noticed it on display in a tiny corner shop that sold scarves and gloves among other things, and everything looked like it had been hand-made. It looked homey and warm and it got my attention. The old lady selling it was very nice about it and let me have it for a thousand won, and I wanted to pay more but she wouldn’t let me. So I got it and the way I wore it, the big tassel at the top hung down behind my head like some Christmas elf’s hat—very corny, I’ll admit, but I liked it that way. Then I got this book I was reading for English class, and sat down in my chair. It was a small chair compared to the fancy-pants deal my roommate Ji-Woo had, but it was comfy and had served me well for the past years.
           The book I was reading was something our English teacher had assigned us to read over the weekend. It was called The Catcher in the Rye, and I’d heard about it getting mentioned a lot in our high school textbooks, so I thought it was going to stink. It didn’t. The main guy, Holden Caulfield, he’s pretty cool. He’s dropped out of a lot of high schools, like me, and hates phony stuff, just like me. I think this Salinger guy may turn out to be my second favorite author of all time, after my brother Dong-Bum, of course. He’s fantastic. One time my brother gave me one of his own pieces to read, one that he’d written a long time ago, just for fun. It was a hell of a read, I assure you. He’d written it when he was 13, even younger than me now, and it was about this little boy who goes on a search for his sister. Only, he’s not completely sane, see, so the world looks really different in his eyes and it looks like he’s having an epic adventure when in reality he’s just cruising the slums of Korea. It was very Don Quixote-ish, in a way, and very profound for a thirteen year-old to write. Dong-Bum hated it because he thought it was damn depressing—he was having a rough school life when he’d written it—but I thought it was all right. It’s a happy ending and all, with the boy finding his sister, and getting mental therapy so that he could go live with his parents in the brighter side of the city. A little corny, maybe, but I liked it because it wasn’t corny the whole way through, just that last bit. I don’t mind corny happy endings too much as long as the entire thing’s good.
           Anyway, I put on my hat and started reading that Catcher in the Rye book. I’d already read through it about four times, actually, but there were some parts I wanted to reread. I’d only read about three pages, though, when I heard somebody coming down that mini-hallway that connects the two rooms in each ho. I didn’t have to look up to know who he was. It was Jung-ho, my ho-mate. About eighty-five times a day he would barge in on me. He was probably the only guy in the whole dorm that wasn’t down at the night concert, besides me. He hardly ever went anywhere. He even skipped morning exercise a few times a week. He was a very peculiar guy. He was older than most of the guys in our grade—almost by a full year—but he sometimes acted even younger than the freshmen, so we called him Noob. I sometimes called him by his normal name, just for a change, but the name stuck too well for other people. He hated the nickname, but no one except me and the teachers called him anything else. If he gets married and has kids someday, his wife and kids would probably call him Noob. He was one of those very, very tall, round-shouldered guys with lousy teeth and messy hair. The whole time I’ve lived with him as his ho-mate, I’ve never seen him brush his teeth even once, nor his hair for that matter. Besides that, his face was full of pimples. Most guys just have them on the cheeks or the forehead or something, but old Jung-ho’s face was peppered with them. Not only that, he had a sort of nasty personality. I wasn’t too crazy about him, to be honest.
           I could feel him standing around near our doorway, poking his head in to see if Ji-woo was around. He hated Ji-woo’s guts and never came over when he was around. He even hated our other roommate, who was a nice guy and not pompous like Ji-Woo was. Jung-ho hated everybody’s guts, damn near.
           He came into the room. “Hey,” he said. “You got any food? Man, I’m starving.” He was always asking for food, that damn sonuvabitch. Even though he pigged out on school food every day—I saw him pile food on his plate higher than his own face once—he was always starving. And the way he asked for it, it was like you would become a bastard if you didn’t give him any. Like you were depriving some poor old beggar on the streets. What a guy.
           “Hey,” I said, without looking up from my book, and rummaged around in my drawers and gave him a cup ramen. We weren’t allowed to eat instant foods here, but everyone did anyway and hardly anyone ever got caught. Old Jung-ho must have eaten the most cup ramens in the whole school, and he never even got caught once. I was sort of hoping that he would then get out of the room to go get hot water for the ramen or something, but he didn’t. Instead he just plopped down on the floor and started jiggling it around, making this very annoying noise with the food.
           “About that baseball game with Daewon. Who won?” he said. He just wanted me to stop reading and enjoying myself. He couldn’t give less of a crap about baseball. “We win, or what?”
           “Nobody won,” I said. Without looking up, though.
           “What?” he said. He was always making you say things twice.
           “Nobody won,” I said. I snuck a look over my book to see what he was up to, besides jiggling that crazy ramen, and saw that he was picking up a picture of this girl I was friends with in middle school, Yoo-na Lee. He must have picked up that goddamn picture about five thousand times since I got it. He always put it back in the wrong place, too, when he was finished. He did it on purpose. You could tell.
           Nobody won,” he said. “How come?”
           “I left all the goddamn equipment on the subway.” I still didn’t look up at him.
           “On the subway, for Chrissake. Ya lost them, ya mean?” ­
           “We got on the wrong subway. I had to keep getting up to check this map.”
           He came right over and stood right in my light. “Hey,” I said. “I’ve been reading the same sentence about twenty times since you came in.”
Any other guy would have taken the hint. Not old Noob. “You think they’ll make you pay for it?”
           “I don’t know, and I don’t give a damn. How about sitting down or something, Noob? You’re right in my goddamn light.”
He kept standing there. He was exactly the kind of guy who wouldn’t get out of your light if you asked him to. He’d do it eventually, but it would take a whole lot longer if you asked him to. “What the hellya reading?”
“Goddamn book.”
He shoved my book back with his hand so that he could see the name of it. “Oh. This one. I haven’t gotten around to reading it yet, actually. Is it any good?”
“This sentence I’m reading is terrific.” I can be quite sarcastic when I’m in the mood, but with guys like Jung-ho it just sails right over their heads.