- Just Added eBooks
- Available Now!
- Your Next Great Read
- Just Added to Kemmerer Collection
- See all ebooks collections
- Just Added Audiobooks
- Available Now!
- Your Next Great Read
- Thrilling Listens
- See all audiobooks collections
Starred review from September 4, 2023
Park returns 15 years after Personal Days with an ingenious postmodern epic of colonial and postcolonial Korea framed in a satire of America’s publishing and tech industries. Soon Sheen, a novelist turned tech employee, works at the Google-esque Gloat, where he unplugs from intrusive work notifications to read an English translation of an “unfinished masterpiece” by obscure Korean author Echo titled Same Bed, Different Dreams. Much of Park’s novel is comprised of Echo’s narrative, which purports to be a “true account of the Korean Provisional Government,” a nationalist group that formed in 1919 during the Japanese occupation and which Echo claims did not disband at the end of Japanese rule in 1945 but in fact continues to operate in secret. The KPG is a motley group; among the ideologically opposed “members” claimed by Echo are Parker Jotter, a Black Korean War veteran turned communist sympathizer and radical science fiction novelist; and Ronald Reagan, who decries the 1983 Soviet attack on a Korean passenger jet. Park exhibits a wizardly range of styles; he can be funny, such as when Soon’s dog digs up a missing chapter of Echo’s book just in time for Soon to read it; lyrical, as in a description of snow as Jotter prepares for a mission (“white pinpricks on my jacket like a universe being born”); or poignant, as with revelations about who was on the doomed flight. By the end, it miraculously hangs together, driven by Park’s deep passion for Korean history. This tribute to the fractured peninsula’s citizens, diaspora, and allies is one for the ages.
Starred review from March 1, 2024
The real Korean Provisional Government, formed by exiled Koreans in 1919 to oppose Japan's occupation of their homeland, disbanded between the end of World War II and the beginning of the Korean War, but Park (Personal Days) imagines an alternate history in which the KPG still exists and has written an unfinished book made up of mind-bending dream narratives. This manuscript, which is being read as a favor by former writer Soon Sheen, is either a true account of the KPG's ongoing covert mission to reunite North and South Korea or merely a collection of poetic short stories. Meanwhile, Soon's daughter is obsessed with a computer game adapted from an old space opera penned by Korean War vet Parker Jotter. The three narrative voices in Park's novel (the KPG manuscript, Soon, and Parker) call for three capable narrators--Shannon Tyo, Daniel K. Isaac, and Dominic Hoffman, respectively. Tyo's youthful yet authoritative tone recalls an enthusiastic teacher delivering a stream-of-consciousness lecture, while Isaac, as Soon, captures the voice of frustrated ambition, anxious fatherhood, and growing confusion as dreams leech into reality. Though Parker's thread only gradually reveals connections to the other two, Hoffman commands listener curiosity and empathy as the grizzled former POW. VERDICT A mystifying counterfactual made immersive in audio.--Lauren Kage
Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Availability can change throughout the month based on the library's budget. You can still place a hold on the title, and your hold will be automatically filled as soon as the title is available again.
The OverDrive Read format of this ebook has professional narration that plays while you read in your browser. Learn more here.
Your session has expired. Please sign in again so you can continue to borrow titles and access your Loans, Wish list, and Holds pages.
If you're still having trouble, follow these steps to sign in.
Add a library card to your account to borrow titles, place holds, and add titles to your wish list.
Have a card? Add it now to start borrowing from the collection.
The library card you previously added can't be used to complete this action. Please add your card again, or add a different card. If you receive an error message, please contact your library for help.