Earlier in the week, I posted a blog about The Orphan Master’s Son:

Today is the official release to of what I believe to be one of the best books of the year, The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson.  (Yes, I know it is January 10th!) To add to the excitement, Adam Johnson will be at Lemuria for a signing and reading on Friday, January 27th. The Orphan Master’s Son is also our January First Editions Club pick.

Click here to read more.

Liz Sullivan, one of our Random House reps, posted her own blog the other day about The Orphan. Here’s what she says:

I’m calling it now–The Orphan Master’s Son is the best book of 2012.  Sure, we’re only nine days into the new year, but you’re going to have to take my word on this declaration.  I haven’t loved a book this much in about five years, and Adam Johnson’s new novel now ranks among my favorite books ever. It really is that spectacular.

The DMZ (above ground) Photo Credit: Adam Johnson

The Orphan Master’s Son is set in North Korea, a location that is so foreign that it itself becomes the dominant player in this story of resilience and adversity.  I happened to be finishing OMS on the night that the news announced Kim Jong Il’s death, and the experience of watching the North Korean people mourn their Dear Leader with this book fresh in my mind was a bit uncanny.  The book makes clear how the North Korean people are trained from infancy to value the state over self, and the Dear Leader is the state.  The wailing mourners make sense in this context; their entire world was unhinged with Kim Jong Il’s death.  It’s a fascinating subject and location.

What’s the story, though?  Jun Do is, as the title suggests, the son of the orphan master.  His mother, vanished, was a singer.  Because he grows up among the orphans, though, everyone assumes that he too is an orphan.  He is put to work doing the jobs that orphans are given, the lowliest tasks in the country.  Eventually Jun Do is trained as a soldier and sent to patrol the pitch black tunnels running under the DMZ and over to South Korea. He learns to fight without seeing.  From there, Jun Do is recruited to become a professional kidnapper, stealing unlucky citizens from Japan.  He accomplishes his missions, but he also glimpses the world outside of North Korea, where the electricity doesn’t shut off in the evenings, where people are free to talk and play and go where they please.  Jun Do, though, returns to his homeland.

North Koreans mourning Kim Jong Il's death

He works as an intelligence officer on a fishing vessel.  He travels to Texas as part of a delegation meeting with a Senator.  He suffers in a forced labor camp.  And Jun Do, the ultimate John Doe character, transforms himself into a completely different person and finds his way into Kim Jong Il’s inner circle.

Adam Johnson

The Orphan Master’s Son is a thriller, an epic adventure story, a cultural critique, a love story, a story of hope and transformation.  It is remarkable for its vibrant characters and plot, but it’s also a literary book.  This is a book into which you can happily lose yourself for a week, and about which you’ll think for weeks afterward.  Adam Johnson has written something brilliant.  The Orphan Master’s Son is one of those books where readers band together to share their love.  I can’t wait for everyone to read this book . . . -Liz Sullivan

This post originally appeared in Liz & Gianna’s Adventures in Book Land. Go there if you love books. You’ll find reviews on the latest books, their favorite books plus anecdotes from bookstores across the South, Texas, Oklahoma and Colorado.

To close this post, see the photos that Adam Johnson took on his trip to North Korea. Note that he has explanations with each photo and that if you choose the slideshow option you will not be able to see them. See the full set of photos here. -Lisa

A Young Calligrapher-Photo Credit: Adam Johnson

 

 

 

Share