Tuesday, May 23, 2017

Pachinko, by Min Jin Lee


The accolades for this fine, epic novel are deserved. In her second novel, author Min Jin Lee follows members of a family (and many equally fascinating ancillary characters) from the Japanese Occupation era in Korea, to the Korean diaspora in Japan, up to 1989. She manages this expansive timespan through third-person omniscient voice, allowing a kind of economy in the storytelling that would otherwise be limited to structural concerns. It’s both a feat of intricate character development and a rapid-moving plot that makes one love the people, even the antagonist, and live through a hundred fast-moving stories that kept pulling at me long after all the pages were turned. Much is written about her inspiration and about the story itself, so I leave this post brief, with a final urging to read this stunning book.

1 comment:

Anne Sibley O'Brien said...

Just finished it, reading long into the night because I couldn't let go of the characters. The writing is gorgeous, with clear, precise details that ground the reader and create a palpable veracity. Such a compelling account of the many ways to be particularly Korean, yet universally, complicatedly human.

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