Saturday, January 31, 2015

A Glimpse Into North Korean Life



The Orphan Master’s Son

By Adam Johnson

This novel is about families living in North Korea under the dictatorship of “the Dear Leader” Kim Jong Il.  At points it’s a brutal story, and there were times I wanted to stop reading, but I just couldn’t put it down.  This novel will move you through a range of emotions as it reveals human nature at extraordinary and at terrifying moments. I think I had to keep reading as I searched for hope.

This author gives a skilled portrayal of his protagonist Jun Do, an everyman citizen of the dangerous Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK).   The novel’s appeal is how well it reflects the debilitating effects of repression on everyday people.  The author said that he wanted to write about “how the tenets of totalitarianism eat away at the things that make us human: freedom, art, choice, identity, expression, love.”

A primary theme is people struggling to stand and maintain an individual identity against the relentless tide of state propaganda.  This is especially a struggle for Jun Do who is labeled an orphan.  Another theme is how people share loving relationships, when in North Korea your first loyalty and love is demanded to the state.  Priority is rigidly ordered: regime first, family second.  The author asks, “Despite dangers, can lovers share their intimate thoughts” when there is the ominous fear of betrayal to the state.

The novel is in two parts.  The first is the biography of Jun Do, and the second is the confessions of Commander Ga.  It’s a shocking twist how these two parts tie together.  Throughout the book there is a rising tension between America and North Korea.  An interesting progression of seemingly unrelated life events thrust Jun Do unexpectedly into an increasing role on this world stage.

Jun Do’s journey begins as a citizen who does what he’s told, and when he’s told, no matter the ethics, and without question.  His exposure to foreign broadcasts, and life encounters bring him to crossroads that conflict with his society.  The reader gets glimpses into the lives of a variety of characters through Jun Do including: a fishing boat captain, the first mate, a newlywed wife, prison inmates, state propaganda movie actress, army commanders, and the self-censorship and paranoia of an interrogator and his family.  Finally you also meet the Dear Leader himself.

The story is obviously a work of love by the author, who is well qualified to write on the topic.  As he described, “so much research was done to build the story including extensive interviews of Korean orphans, defectors, and revelations of prisoners’ stories.  The Pyongyang’s Workers’ Party newspaper was the source for much of the propaganda that is prominent in the book.”  In 2007 Adam Johnson was allowed by North Korea to take a strictly guided tour of Pyongyang.

I wished for the resilient, inquisitive Jun Do to feel the freedom of his own sense of purpose.  This is fiction, based on extensive research, but as the author said, “the reality is that we’ll know the true way to write a novel set in North Korea when North Korean novelists become free to tell their own stories.  I hope that day comes soon.”

Thereby hangs a tale . . . .

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