Heart’s Dzyer

Heart’s Dzyer is a memoir built from more than 193 letters exchanged between author Woo-Ae Yi and her former boyfriend Snail between 2011 and 2015, then transcribed after his death in 2023. What begins as a prison pen-pal reconnection between two people who knew each other in middle school slowly opens into something stranger, riskier, and more intimate: a record of affection under surveillance, of art made in confinement, of addiction, depression, longing, manipulation, tenderness, and the way a person’s voice can outlive the body that carried it. The book moves through requests for photo enlargements and tattoo sketches, coded financial favors, flirtation, emotional collapse, private jokes, fox-and-hound imagery, and eventually the ache of loss, all while insisting on the rawness of the original letters rather than smoothing them into a cleaner memoir.

I was surprised by how alive Snail feels on the page, and how uneasy that aliveness can be. He can be lyrical one moment and coercive the next, self-deprecating and charming in the same breath. A line about a “6×9 labyrinth” gives way to instructions for mailing hidden cash; a meditation on loneliness turns into delight over stickers, cartoons, dubstep, or a glowing light box. That instability is the book’s power. Yi doesn’t sanitize him into a noble tragic figure, and I respected that. She lets the contradictions stand. I found that deeply moving, because love here isn’t sentimental at all. It’s full of care, fascination, danger, rescue fantasies, and blurred boundaries. The emotional truth comes precisely from the fact that the book refuses to turn this correspondence into something tidier than it was.

As writing, the book is rough in ways that are sometimes frustrating and often essential. The preserved misspellings, abrupt tonal swings, and sheer accumulation of letters can make the reading experience challenging. But that feels earned. Prison correspondence should not read like a polished novel. It should snag. It should circle. It should sometimes feel like being trapped in somebody else’s head. I also admired the way art keeps breaking through the prose. The requests to enlarge drawings, the graffiti pieces, the tattoo designs, the “Gentle” image caged in chain-link logic, even the odd tenderness of The Fox and the Hound references all give the relationship a visual pulse. The book’s ideas about identity, loneliness, performance, and survival aren’t laid out as arguments, but they accumulate by pressure. By the end, I felt I’d spent time not just with a doomed romance, but with a record of how people improvise meaning when freedom, time, and dignity have all been damaged.

I found Heart’s Dzyer messy, haunting, intimate, and brave. I finished it feeling tender toward both the love it preserves and the pain it refuses to disguise. This is a book I’d recommend to readers who are drawn to epistolary memoirs, prison writing, complicated love stories, and books that leave the seams showing, because those seams are the whole point.

Pages: 574 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GKY4MF85

Buy Now From Amazon
Unknown's avatar

About Literary Titan

The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on March 28, 2026, in Book Reviews, Four Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from LITERARY TITAN

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading