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For twenty-three years, Kim Minjeong has been recording her life.
Not the important parts - anyone can remember those. She records the peripheral things: the specific quality of afternoon light in a particular apartment. The way a laugh sounds when it belongs to someone you love and haven't told. The exact weight of a silence you chose because the alternative felt too dangerous to survive.
Her best friend, Yoo Jimin, knows nothing about the recordings. Jimin has built a life of careful precision - a thriving architecture firm, a home with clean lines and honest materials, and a husband, Jaehwa, who chose her with his eyes wide open. By every reasonable measure, she is exactly where she wanted to be.
Then Minjeong leaves.
She goes to Paris for a long-term photography residency the week after the wedding - Jimin's wedding - leaving behind a hard drive containing forty-seven audio recordings spanning the years from 1999 to 2024. A note in Minjeong's handwriting says only: You don't have to listen. But I wanted you to have the choice I never gave you.
"Everything I Couldn't Say" is a novel about the cost of silence. About the lives we build around the loves we don't name. About the moment we are finally forced to ask: what did I know, and when did I decide not to know it?
It is a love story. It is also a reckoning.