- The video games bedeviling Elon Musk
- Gamers tear into Musk for 'faking' video game prowess
- Global equities rally, pushing London and Frankfurt to new records
- US grounds SpaceX's Starship after fiery mid-air explosion
- US to tighten trade rules to hit low-cost China shipments
- US grounds SpaceX's Starship rocket pending probe
- IMF raises global growth outlook and flags rising economic divergence
- London, Frankfurt hit record highs as global equities rally
- Pompeii reveals 'impressive' bath complex
- EU deepens probe into X after Musk outbursts
- London stock market hits record high as global equities rally
- 2024 saw fastest-ever annual rise in CO2 levels: UK weather service
- 'No money': gloom on Beijing streets as economic growth slows
- Nintendo shares tumble as Switch 2 teaser disappoints
- Apple sidelines AI news summaries due to errors
- China says population fell for third year in a row in 2024
- Asian traders give mixed reaction as China's economic growth slows
- Chinese economic growth among slowest in decades
- 'Damaging' AI porn scandal at US school scars victims
- Nintendo shares tumble as Switch 2 preview disappoints
- SpaceX catches Starship booster again, but upper stage explodes
- SpaceX catches Starship booster but upper stage explodes
- Hypertec Cloud Partners With Potentia to Power Sustainable AI Cloud Expansion With Additional 480MW of Balanced Capacity Across North America
- Insurance access for US homeowners with higher climate risks declines
- Wall Street rally loses steam as European luxury shares advance
- China set to post sluggish growth as doldrums deepen
- US braces for freezing weather fueled by polar vortex
- Musk's Starship set for launch after Bezos orbital triumph
- Surf star Slater pays tribute as Quiksilver co-founder Green dies
- Teen kills fellow student teacher at Slovak school
- LIV Golf sign United States broadcast deal with Fox Sports
- Slovak entrepreneur funding rescue of German flying taxi startup
- French researchers aim to ease X refugees' path with 'HelloQuitX'
- China property giant Vanke's CEO 'taken away' by police: report
- Oil giant BP cuts thousands of jobs to slash costs
- EU announces 120 mn euros in Gaza aid after ceasefire
- Nepal's top court bars infrastructure in protected areas
- Stock markets jump as inflation worries ease
- China to probe US chips over dumping, subsidies
- India's outcast toilet cleaners keeping Hindu festival going
- Apple loses top spot in China smartphone sales to local rivals
- Sri Lanka signs landmark $3.7 bn deal with Chinese state oil giant
- Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket blasts into orbit for first time
- UK economy rebounds but headwinds remain for govt
- Stocks follow Wall St higher on welcome US inflation data
- Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket blasts off in first launch, reaches orbit
- Chinese give guarded welcome to spending subsidies
- World Bank plans $20 bn payout for Pakistan over coming decade
- Indian Bollywood star Saif Ali Khan stabbed in burglary
- Taiwan's TSMC says net profit rose 57% in fourth quarter
South Korea's Han sells one million books after Nobel win
More than a million copies of books by Han Kang, the first South Korean to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, have sold locally since the honour was announced, bookstores said Wednesday.
The short story writer and novelist is best known overseas for her Man Booker Prize-winning "The Vegetarian", her first novel translated into English.
The 53-year-old, who also became the first Asian woman author to win the Nobel, was chosen "for her intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life", the Swedish Academy said last week.
Han's win has created a sensation in South Korea, with the websites of major bookstores and publishing houses crashing after it was announced, as tens of thousands rushed to order her books.
As of Wednesday morning, at least 1.06 million copies, including e-books, had been sold since last Thursday's Nobel announcement, three major bookstores and online retailers -- Kyobo, Aladin and YES24 -- told AFP.
"Han Kang's books are experiencing unprecedented sales. This is a situation we have never seen before," Kyobo spokesperson Kim Hyun-jung told AFP.
Online bookstore Aladin said Han's victory had not only led to a staggering 1,200-fold increase in the sales of her books compared with the same period last year, but dramatically boosted the sales of South Korean literature as a whole.
Since her win, "the overall sales of Korean literature increased by more than 12 times compared to the previous year", it said in a statement.
Sales of two books Han recently mentioned she was reading -- "Inventory of Losses" by Judith Schalansky and "Atlas de botanique élémentaire" by Jean-Jacques Rousseau -- had also surged, Aladin said.
Kyobo Book Centre said while it does not have exact figures, Han's books had seen dramatically higher sales compared with other Nobel prize winners.
"We have been in the publishing industry for a while, but this whole situation feels very surreal even to some of us," a Kyobo employee told AFP.
South Koreans have been overjoyed by the news, with Han's alma mater, Seoul's Yonsei University, displaying banners that read: "Congratulations to the proud Yonsei alumnus, Han Kang, on winning the Nobel Prize in Literature."
In her hometown of Gwangju -- where a massacre occurred in 1980 that later inspired Han's acclaimed novel "Human Acts" -- a congratulatory banner was hung on a building fired on by a military helicopter at the time.
Local reports said some printing houses had been operating at full capacity on the weekend to meet the demand for Han's books.
"I've never been this busy since I joined the company in 2006," an Aladin employee told AFP.
"But it's all been very happy."
D.Avraham--CPN