Blazing a Trail When The Road Ends

Blazing a Trail When The Road Ends

by Jeong Jeong
Blazing a Trail When The Road Ends

Blazing a Trail When The Road Ends

by Jeong Jeong

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Overview

This book tells the life story of Shin Yong-ho, who founded and built Kyobo Life Insurance, Kyobo Book Centre, and the Daesan Foundation. Shin contracted a terrible illness in his childhood, and by the time he had recovered, it was too late to go to school. Despite missing his chance to receive a formal education, he taught himself through a thousand-day reading project and through hands-on learning. After heading to Seoul by himself at the age of twenty, he moved to China and built a company from scratch. Meanwhile, a meeting with the patriotic poet Yi Yuk-sa inspired him to support the independence movement and pursue his ambition of becoming a capitalist for the Korean people. At the end of World War II, Shin returned to Korea penniless, but he kept his spirits strong and with a great deal of effort invented the concept of education insurance to satisfy Koreans' thirst for learning. His decision to establish Kyobo Book Centre under the slogan "People make books, and books make people" in the middle of Gwanghwamun in downtown Seoul illustrates his passion for promoting national education and the way he put that into practice. Shin was unstinting in his support of public interest projects, and he established the Daesan Foundation to contribute to the development and globalization of Korean literature, along with the Daesan Agricultural Foundation (originally the Daesan Foundation for Rural Culture and Society) and the Kyobo Foundation for Education. It was Shin, with his profound knowledge of literature, who suggested putting up a billboard at Gwanghwamun (this became known as the Gwanghwamun Geulpan) to carry messages of comfort and hope for the busy pedestrians crossing that intersection. All this sprang from the insight that Shin gained by carefully examining each situation from all possible angles.

Shin was a great entrepreneur who did not content himself with business success and never stopped striving for the development of his country and the future of his people. He was given the John S. Bickley Founder's Award, which is regarded as the Nobel Prize in the field of insurance; he was named the Insurance Mentor; and he became the first businessperson to be awarded the Geumgwan (Golden Crown) Order of Cultural Merit. The endless creativity and ambition evident in Shin's life teach us the wisdom and courage that we need in our own.

The can-do spirit that blazed a trail in the wilderness

Shin managed to survive the illness he suffered during his childhood on the slopes of Mt Wolchulsan, but he missed his chance to obtain a formal education, never attending elementary or middle school. Even so, his thousand-day reading project and hands-on learning served as an effective way to study and develop his talents. His self-study at this time gave him an unbreakable will. After training his intellect and realizing his dreams, Shin struck out for Seoul at the tender age of twenty and then continued to the Chinese city of Dalian (then Dairen) by himself. This was his first step toward becoming a businessman dedicated to the good of his nation and people.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940161535141
Publisher: Seoul Selection
Publication date: 03/13/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

Jeong In-yeong was born in 1933 in Okcheon, Chungcheongbuk-do, Korea, and graduated from Sungkyunkwan University with a bachelor’s degree in Korean language and literature. He made his debut as a novelist when his books Horizon without Exit and Sound Image won the Hyundae Munhak (Contemporary Literature) Award. His major works include the short stories “Limitation of Adam,” “Strange Land,” “Soiled Wings,” “Yellow Circle Belt,” “Prisoner’s Season,” “Specter of Naught,” and “Yukmun,” and the novel Grandchild.
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