Frances Park is a Korean American author of novels and memoirs published around the world. Her books have been praised by The Straits Times, The Washington Post, The Korea Times, USA Today, The Times Literary Supplement, The London Times, The Korean Quarterly, The Taipei Times, National Public Radio, Voice of America, Radio Free Asia, CNN, Newsweek, and Good Morning America. Her stories reflect an identity shaped by two worlds. In her novel Blue Rice, a Korean woman who survived the war must adjust to 1960s white America while confronting the pain of her husband's desertion. Her poignant novel The Summer My Sister Was Cleopatra Moon explores the spiritual dislocation of two Korean American sisters growing up in Washington, DC suburbia in the 1970s. Her memoir-in-essays That Lonely Spell was praised by Kirkus Reviews as ""a fresh take on the Korean American memoir by a writer from a generation whose voice has seldom been heard."" Frances's award-winning short stories and essays have appeared in over fifty literary magazines, including O, The Oprah Magazine, The Massachusetts Review, The Columbia Journal, The London Magazine, Arts & Letters, The Bellevue Literary Review, and The Chicago Quarterly. The loss of her father at a young age haunts much of her writing. In Ahn Love, she imagines him as he might have been had he lived to the age of ninety. Frances lives outside Washington, DC. Visit her at parksisters.com.