A compulsively readable and razor-sharp campus novel about the impact of power and consent in a
university setting Perfect for fans of Cho Nam-joo I May Destroy You and If We Were Villains
by M. L. Rio Riveting and uncompromising Another Person explores the long-lasting consequences
of the sexism and misogyny fostered in universities. Vacuum cleaner bitch . When Jina sees this
anonymous comment on a forum it forces her out of her stupor. It is posted on a website
dissecting her public allegations of workplace sexual assault the backlash to which forced her
to quit her job. She has spent months glued to her laptop screen junk-food packaging piling up
around her tracking the hate campaign that's raging against her online. This post stands out
from the noise for it could only have been made by someone who knew her as a student at
university. The comment stirs something deeply repressed. So Jina returns to Anjin University
and to the toxic culture that destroyed the lives of many female students including one Ha
Yuri who died tragically and mysteriously not long before Jina left. Somewhere within Jina's
memories is the truth about what happened to Yuri all those years ago. Told in alternating
viewpoints in sharp intelligent and multi-layered prose this powerful and necessary novel
confronts issues of sexism and abuse on university campuses.