Minari ◆

His wife, Monica, saw only the trailer. The leaky roof. The crooked floor. The black snake that slithered under the washing machine. She saw the miles between them and a real hospital for David’s heart, a murmur that made her listen to his chest every night as if counting the beats of a small, frantic bird.

But then David, the boy with the bad heart, the boy who had been told not to run, not to cry, not to be too much of anything—he started to walk. Away from the fire. Away from his parents’ frozen grief. He walked down the dark path to the creek, his grandmother’s hand in his. Minari

The seeds arrived in a plain, brown paper envelope, smelling of dust and the other side of the world. To six-year-old David, they were just shriveled black things, like dead insects. But to his grandmother, Soonja, they were a covenant. His wife, Monica, saw only the trailer