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Former criminal profiler Pyo Chang-won targets the dark underbelly of contemporary society in his new novel, Trash Island: The Defiled, where hatred, malicious online comments and fake news collide. Although it uses the trappings of a crime thriller, the book reads less like a conventional detective story and more like a sociopolitical examination of verbal violence and mob psychology in our era.
The story opens when police discover a body in a one-room studio in Seoul’s Gongdeok-dong neighborhood — all ten fingers severed. The victim is revealed to be a professional online troll. In the weeks that follow, purveyors of fake news, internet wreckers and journalists who habitually publish distorted reports are killed one by one, and the killer leaves the message “Trash Island” at each scene. The title evokes the vast Pacific garbage patch; the author uses it as a metaphor for a society adrift on hate and misinformation.
The novel creates a strong sense of immersion with scenarios that closely resemble real news and with the kind of psychological detail you would expect from a former profiler. It persistently probes a provocative question: if you did not directly kill someone, can you truly be considered innocent?—exposing the violence that can hide behind claims of freedom of expression.
Trash Island: The Defiled moves at a brisk pace but leaves readers with a heavy, unsettling aftertaste. It poses sharp questions for anyone living in an age when outrage and sensationalism have become routine. 356 pages, 18,000 KRW (about $13.50 USD).











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