[This Week's Books] 50 World Walking Trips and 5 More View original image


◆ 50 Best Walking Trails in the World = This is the story of the author who became a professional tracker after an experience of walking aimlessly for 14 hours one summer day, suffering from insomnia caused by the frustration, anxiety, and worries of office life 13 years ago. It introduces 50 of the most beautiful walking trails both domestically and internationally. The book includes various information such as the history and culture of the areas, distances, elevations, and waypoints necessary for walking trips. (Written by Lee Young-cheol / SISO)


[This Week's Books] 50 World Walking Trips and 5 More View original image

◆ #Killerstagram = There is a killer family that has been killing people for generations since the Silla Dynasty. The novel is narrated from the perspective of ‘I,’ the youngest member of the family and a high school student. Taking the place of an uncle who declared a halt to killing and left the house, ‘I’ is honing close-combat murder skills. However, there is no talent. Ironically, the reason for not stopping the killings is ‘to create a better world.’ (Written by Lee Gap-su / Siwolil)


[This Week's Books] 50 World Walking Trips and 5 More View original image

◆ Kim Hye-ju’s YouTube Video Making = This book captures the one-year journey of a YouTuber with 100,000 subscribers becoming special. It introduces how to create a YouTube channel, find topics, and plan content. Based on subtitle templates and channel planning forms, it teaches how to easily make videos on the first day of editing using Premiere Rush. It also covers how to gather subscribers and generate income from multiple channels. (Written by Kim Hye-ju / Aegis Publishing)


[This Week's Books] 50 World Walking Trips and 5 More View original image

◆ Jin Seok-ho’s One English Sentence Writing = The author, a modern dancer who left the dance world due to injury, shares English study know-how acquired during 10 years of master’s and doctoral studies in the U.S., starting with about middle school first-grade English skills. It also introduces child education methods that involve copying English sentences, memorizing them, and reading English newspapers. Incidentally, the author’s theory is that starting English study too early is harmful. (Written by Jin Seok-ho / Roundabout)


[This Week's Books] 50 World Walking Trips and 5 More View original image

◆ Faint Days of Hope = This is the first essay collection by literary critic Heo Hee. After long self-questioning about why she often reads and occasionally writes, she presents her answer. Borrowing relatively familiar novels, movies, and song lyrics?from ‘Anne of Green Gables’ to the film ‘Before Sunrise’?she unfolds fragments of life. Although it takes the form of detours through novels or movies, it is ultimately a confession about why she cannot help but engage in criticism. (Written by Heo Hee / Chusubat)



[This Week's Books] 50 World Walking Trips and 5 More View original image

◆ High Growth Handbook = High-growth companies face similar challenges. Organizational structure, fundraising, organizational culture, and many obstacles stand in the way. The mental health of the CEO at the center is also unstable. Problems arise whether they take on too much work or delegate too much. The author, revered as Silicon Valley’s top mentor, introduces strategies for growing into a unicorn company through such processes. It conveys patterns of high-growth companies based on experience. (Written by Ilad Gil / Sejong)


This content was produced with the assistance of AI translation services.

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