Review: Meeting with my Brother by Yi Mun-yol

meeting

Autobiographical account of the impact on one family of a divided nation

Publisher’s description: A sobering yet hopeful depiction of the volatile relationship between the divided Koreas. Yi, the narrator, is a South Korean university professor searching for his father who defected to the North at the outbreak of war. Instead he finds his half-brother and their tense meeting takes a surprising turn. This semi-autobiographical account upends the West’s assumptions about North Korean life.

My Review

This is my first experience of Korean literature and, although a slim volume, I found it quite a challenging read as it contains a great deal of detail about the history and politics of Korea, notably the separation of North and South Korea and prospects for reunification. There are a lot of allegorical features with characters representing particular aspects of ideological thought, such as Mr Reunification. Similarly the two brothers really represent the two parts of the divided nation. Only a small portion of the book covers the narrator’s meeting with his half-brother and, for me, these were the most successful aspects of the book with some interesting details of Korean tradition and rituals. The other parts I found quite dry. At times I felt the book verged on political essay rather than novel. What does comes across from the two brothers’ sharing of their experiences is that the people of each part of the divided Korea have suffered as a consequence of war, retribution (the law of “guilt by association”) and economic collapse. Ultimately, grief over their father’s death and this commonality of experience brings (albeit limited) reconciliation between the divided families.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of NetGalley and Columbia University Press.

Book facts: Publication date 4th April 2017, translated by Heinz Insu Fenkl with Yoosup Chang

My rating: 3 (out of 5)

In three words: Didactic, autobiographical, informative

About the Author

Yi Mun-yol was born in Seoul, South Korea in 1948 but the outbreak of the Korean War and his father’s defection to North Korea forced his family to move about until they settled in Yeongyang, his family’s ancestral seat.  He has written several novels and more than fifty novellas and short stories.

Book Review – Her Perfect Life by Sam Hepburn

About the Book

perfect

How far would you go to create the perfect life?  

Grace Dwyer has it all – handsome husband, adorable child, beautiful home and glittering career. The perfect life.

Her new friend Juliette doesn’t exactly fit in. She’s a down-on-her-luck single parent with no money and not much hope.

So just what is it that draws Grace and Juliette together? And when the cracks start to appear in Grace’s perfect life, can both of them survive?

Format: ebook (392 pages) Publisher: Harper Collins
Publication date: 23rd February 2017 Genre: Thriller

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My Review

Seemingly Gracie has the perfect life. She’s a celebrity cook and successful businesswoman. She lives in a designer house with her handsome husband and beautiful little girl. But Gracie’s “perfect” life is starting to unravel.   Juliette definitely has anything but the perfect life. She has money problems, is a little bit too fond of a drink and is struggling to bring up her daughter alone following a messy relationship.

The unfolding events are recounted from the points of view of Gracie and Juliette and an unnamed third narrator (the latter through diary entries). I thought the author did a good job of creating distinctive voices for Gracie and Juliette and revealing different aspects of their characters as the book progressed.  Gradually, the connections between Gracie, Juliette and the unnamed diarist are revealed resulting in a satisfyingly clever twist at the end.  I did guess part of the twist but not all.  An entertaining read.

I received an advance review copy courtesy of NetGalley and publishers, Harper Collins, in return for an honest review.

In three words: Entertaining, mystery, thriller
Try something similar: I Let You Go by Clare Mackintosh

About the Author

Sam read modern languages at Cambridge University and, after a brief spell in advertising she joined the BBC as a General Trainee. She worked as a documentary maker for twenty years and was one of the commissioners for the launch of BBC Four. Quicksilver, her first novel for children, was published in 2010. Since then she has published a sequel to Quicksilver and two crime thrillers for teenagers. She has been shortlisted for several prestigious prizes and nominated for the Cilip Carnegie Medal for her YA thrillers. Her Perfect Life is Sam’s debut psychological thriller for adults.

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