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Lee Tae Jun's "Crows"

Some stories stay with you long after you finish reading them. Not because they are dramatic or full of plot twists, but because something inside them lingers—like a sound in the distance you can’t quite forget. For me, one of those stories is  “Crows”  by  Lee Tae-jun . I first read it several years ago, and ever since then, every time I hear a crow calling somewhere in the distance, I think of that story. It’s strange how literature can do that—how it quietly attaches itself to the everyday world. A sound, a season, a passing moment—and suddenly you find yourself inside a story again. Lee's short story, first published during the 1930s, unfolds in a bleak winter landscape. The narrator, a writer, retreats to a remote rural area to escape the noise and pressures of the city. The countryside he arrives in is cold, silent, and nearly empty—one of those winter places where the wind moves across the fields, and the sky seems unusually wide. There, he meets a woman who is gra...

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