Pachinko: by Min Jin Lee

 


Pachinko: by Min Jin Lee

After quite a break from blogging, I decided to restart with my review of books that I have read in recent past. 

Pachinko was the most recent book that I have read, and before picking up my next one, I just could not restrain myself from writing a bit about this 'masterpiece'. 

I was astounded by the comment from Barack Obama on the cover of this book and it reads: “a powerful story about resilience and compassion” and this really made me pick this book. All these words stand true to the core qua the story.

I read this 500 (and odd) pages book in a weeks’ time. You just cannot put it down.

The storyline is weaved starting from the year 1910 (Busan, Korea) and up till 1989 (Tokyo). It orbited around a beautiful girl, a lady, a mother, a grandmother ‘Sunja’ and is all about her birth, love, struggle, separation, tears, death and survival against all odds.   

A real narrative of Koreans in war-torn Japan and Korea and speaks at length about life of Koreans in Japan; its all about their struggle and hatred they faced.

Simple storyline; but really captivating and a page-turner.

Worth your money and time…. a must read. 





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