The prologue first invites us elegantly to the 5,000-year-old country of Korea, 'sometimes invaded, occupied or oppressed, but always surviving between the oceans and thousands of flint-shaped mountains'. It introduces the four stories, set in four seasons in a southern fishing village with a dirt road lined with chestnut, Korean pines and persimmons leading to a temple.
The first story (all I've read so far) concerns two young boys and the style is so simple and reminiscent of Famous Five adventures you are tempted to call the chapter 'the case of the missing casket'. But behind the good yarn that you could happily read to your children is, the jacket blurb explains, a deeper message of enlightenment and spiritual awakening.