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A review by maryehavens
Pachinko by Min Jin Lee
emotional
informative
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
5.0
If you get the chance to get the audio, do it. The narrator was fantastic and I found myself pretty sad after I had to turn it back into the library.
This book is so dense, I forgot that the beginning was indeed this book and not another one. That being said, it's not too dense to follow. I do recommend keeping a list of characters - it spans about 50ish years and there's a lot of people. Plus, in that time, World War II and the Korean War happen so there is a lot of history as well. Lee makes it easier by providing a year and location as each chapter heading. Still, it would have helped me to keep a list of characters.
I had no idea about the treatment of Koreans in Japan nor the lack of country that Koreans had/have. What a weird loophole. I don't think it's specific to Japan and I don't think it would be hard to find people in America in the same situation.
The writing is fantastic and Lee did such a wonderful job showing the cultural changes in language, attitude, opportunities, etc. as the years went by. There were so many times I was trying to tell the characters "don't go to Nagasaki!! A bomb will fall there" or the like. You definitely fall in love with the characters and my heart broke over every misfortune.
Highly recommended. It's one of the New York Times best 100 of the 21st Century and I wholeheartedly agree.
This book is so dense, I forgot that the beginning was indeed this book and not another one. That being said, it's not too dense to follow. I do recommend keeping a list of characters - it spans about 50ish years and there's a lot of people. Plus, in that time, World War II and the Korean War happen so there is a lot of history as well. Lee makes it easier by providing a year and location as each chapter heading. Still, it would have helped me to keep a list of characters.
I had no idea about the treatment of Koreans in Japan nor the lack of country that Koreans had/have. What a weird loophole. I don't think it's specific to Japan and I don't think it would be hard to find people in America in the same situation.
The writing is fantastic and Lee did such a wonderful job showing the cultural changes in language, attitude, opportunities, etc. as the years went by. There were so many times I was trying to tell the characters "don't go to Nagasaki!! A bomb will fall there" or the like. You definitely fall in love with the characters and my heart broke over every misfortune.
Highly recommended. It's one of the New York Times best 100 of the 21st Century and I wholeheartedly agree.
Moderate: Racism
Minor: Death, Suicide, and War