genre: nonfiction
For those of us on the outside, North Korea can feel like a mystery. You know things aren't okay, you've heard some stuff in the news about it or maybe you saw a documentary once about it. But this book takes you deep into the lives of several different North Koreans. While, of course, each of their lives is unique and, especially based on class, full of different kinds of challenges and trauma - across the board the common denominator is that a totalitarian government did not care about them. It didn't care that they were fed, that they were warm, that they had electricity. The cult of the Dear Leader was such that the average North Korean was taught since birth that THIS life, their sparse North Korean life, was exactly what it was supposed to be and that it was all thanks to Kim Jong-il. So complete was their seclusion from the rest of the world that there was no way to learn anything different.
Told from the reporter's perspective, this is a raw and heartbreaking look at several individuals over years of time. We watch the crumbling of infrastructure, the startling death of Kim Jong-il, the beginning of the famine and the true depth of the famine crisis. I was impressed by the ingenuity of these individuals and was super intrigued by what it was that finally made each of them in their own way, open their eyes to the reality of life in the only country they'd ever known.
The jumping around between people was hard for me, sometimes it felt disjointed - but I do think that this way of narrating fleshed out the human experience since depending on who your parents were or where your relatives lived, your North Korean life looked quite different. While a hard story to listen to sometimes, this is an important record.