Diamond Raiders: Mount Kumgang Mystery
  • Digital List Price: USD 0.99
  • Offer Price: FREE
  • ISBN/ASIN: B0CJ897NR7
  • Language: English

Diamond Raiders: Mount Kumgang Mystery

Mae Adams



Mount Kumgang was the sacred place of Koreans for many centuries. In the 7th century, the Silla Kingdom (one of the three kingdoms) built a captivating Buddhist Temple. It looked like the House of Three Gods, defined as Heaven, Earth, and the God of Ancestors. Every poet and artist who lived during the Joseon dynasty (1392-1910) made a special journey to paint watercolors and write verses. The World War II division of the country in 1945 stopped the South Korean people from visiting these cherished mountains for the past 78 years. The 155-mile-long barbed-wire fence erected as part of the Demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas after the War proved to be an obstruction deadlier than any other barrier.
Numerous folk tales, myths, and legends connected to Mount Kumgang delighted people for many generations. But the story in this book is concerned with raiders of diamonds from the Temple during the Japanese occupation of 35 years, where no Korean police existed, and the Japanese police controlled all the crimes in the country. However, it is the natural law that anyone raiding things from a sacred place has to pay the price. How to identify the raiders and what price the raiders had to pay is anyone's guess. Koreans are gentle and seldom engage in murder, although they can be hot-headed to butt their heads first and shake hands later. Thus, identifying guilty people was extremely difficult.






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About the Author

Mae Adams was born in Korea in 1933 as the useless second daughter of an Aristocratic Family, and her mother rejected her for not being a son. But her grandparents raised her in a mountain village, where the family retreated upon the Japanese invasion of 1910. Mae's grandma gave her a pair of magic silver chopsticks to protect her life from poison and other physical harm. When Mae's father suffered from tuberculosis in Seoul, his family came to live with her Grandparents and Mae, but Mae's relationship with her mother was stormy, and her father ignored her until his death when Mae was five and a half years old.
Mae went to a Japanese school, and after World War II, the family escaped from the Communist regime that had taken over Mae's hometown and came after the family's blood. Her grandma stayed behind to give the family time to escape. In the wake of the harrowing escape from North Korea, the family lived in Seoul as refugees, but hard luck kept following their path. From 1950 to 1953, the family lived through the traumatic Korean War and lost what they had rebuilt. But Mae fought back, became the family's breadwinner, and dreamed of going to America for a college education. Although she fell in love with an American Marine, Colonel Hewitt Adams, she went her way to pursue her education.
Following the three years of long-distance romance, she married Hewitt and raised a family. Hewitt retired from the Marine Corps, went back to school, got his degree, and became a professor at Clemson University teaching Asian and American history. Mae, fluent in four languages, taught him Chinese, which was a required course. Hewitt wanted to write Mae's life story upon his second retirement, but his many ailments prevented him from it. He lost the battle with cancer after 43 years together, and while grieving, Mae wrote her memoir as therapy and eventually wrote Precious Silver Chopsticks for publication. Her second book is Coin for a Dream, and the third book is The Letters/A Lifetime Foreign Affair. She had accomplished her lifelong dream of becoming an author at the age of 84.


 
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