A Novel from North Korea
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Köp båda 2 för 1105 krNamed a Best Book of World Literature of 2020 * Library Journal * In its candid examination of domestic conflict and female ambition, Friend unsettles expectations of North Korean life . . . [it] offers a beguiling introduction to the everyday, with none of the rockets and military parades that the words "North Korea" often bring to mind. * New York Times Book Review * This tender, witty novel is indeed a page-turner. Neither a searing indictment of the regime nor a propaganda screed, Friend illuminates the personal rather than the political, the daily trials of workplace conflicts and marital woes. In doing so, it sharpens our ability to see the fragility and messy humanity in lives too often obscured by state agendas. * The Guardian * With still so little known about the North Korean people beyond mostly tortuous escapee narratives, Kim enables a rare, welcome glimpse into 'a messy world of human emotions and relationships that is at once entirely alien and eerily familiar.' * Booklist, Starred Review * Friend is both a good read and a rare inside look into North Korean culture. * Book Riot * A layered story of family obligations stretched to breaking point . . . Reading Friend is like sifting through a black box for clues into a sealed culture. * Times Literary Supplement * Paek weaves themes of greed, corruption, and self-sacrifice into a subtle, restrained narrative . . . A rare glimpse into an insular world. * Kirkus Reviews * Friend offers an astute psychological exploration of marriage, the work that goes into such a partnership, and the many ways it could fail us. * Minneapolis Star Tribune * Reading Friend is like meeting a new person when you're blindfolded. You touch their face, tracing their features with your fingertips. You can't quite picture them, but you feel the warmth and texture of their skin. * New York Review of Books * Paek's focus on individuals and family, and his willingness to acknowledge failings, make for a novel that manages to be engaging, and even quite moving, even beyond its context. * Complete Review * Friend offers a fascinating glimpse into the realities of North Korean life. It reminds us that the people of that country may face hardships, but they also experience the same domestic challenges that afflict humans everywhere. * New York Journal of Books * A North Korean version of Marriage Story. . .This novel is so fascinating. * Paperback Paris * The language in Friend is spare and unadorned and refreshingly clear. * CounterPunch * [This book] is fascinating for the demands it makes on readers. Friend is not a breezy work, though it's extremely easy to read, and Kim's translation is lucid and graceful. But not even the clarity of its narrative can make the workings of Paek Nam-nyong's story seem close to the kind of novelistic story we are used to hearing and telling in English. . . Paek's novel [is] the most "foreign" one to enter English in many years. * Mumbai Mirror * The American publication of Friend is a monumental achievement and the novel, quite literally, is beyond compare. * Asia Media International * Friend, in this able and very readable translation by Immanuel Kim, is a salutary antidote to the many tomes that purport to explain the DPRK. The North Korea of the novel is-like everywhere else-filled with real people . . . In North Korea, again like everywhere else, life can be a half-empty, half-full proposition. Of course, in our better moments, we know this, but it helps to be reminded. * Asian Review of Books * Friend depicts daily life in North Korean society. The psychology of human relationships evoked in this fascinating novel shows that North Koreans, far from being brainwashed robots, are as fragile as people everywhere-that they too simply want to be happy together, and suffer intensely when things go wrong. -- Brother Anthony, Sogang University The publication of Immanuel Kim's painstaking translation of Paek Nam-nyong's Friend is a significant e
Paek Nam-nyong is one of the most renowned writers in North Korea today. He was born in 1949 in Hamhung and worked in a steel factory for many years before enrolling at Kim Il Sung University. He worked in the Writer's Union and later joined the elite group of writers called April 15th Literary Production Unit. Immanuel Kim is Korea Foundation and Kim-Renaud Associate Professor of Korean Literature and Culture Studies at George Washington University. He is the author of Rewriting Revolution: Women, Sexuality, and Memory in North Korean Fiction (2018).
Friend Afterword