I really need to stop putting books on here as “reading” until I actually start them, because I seem to always have problems editing the dates, lol. Anyway, bear with me on this review… I just finished and am writing from my phone in bed, so these don’t turn out as well as ones typed on a laptop or PC.
Sung-Yoon Lee’s book was indeed well-written and does surprisingly provide the reader with some new information in regard to the reclusive North Korean regime and its new media darling, dictatoress-in-waiting, Kim Yo Jong (beloved little sister of Kim Jong-Un and heir apparent should anything happen to him).
It’s surprising because everyone who knows anything about NK is aware of how closely the Kim family dynasty keep their cards to their chest. When the top global security and intelligence agencies and officials can’t even determine precise birthdates of Jong-Un and Yo Jong, nor whether they’re married, how many children they have, their age(s), etc., you can’t exactly expect a foreign journalist to do so, either.
He may be Korean, but he was fortunate enough to grow up in the South. Without the experience of living in North Korea, he mostly has to rely on other sources and his own interpretations of what the Kim family’s public actions and statements truly mean (and with that, he does a fantastic job of looking past the excitement of a pretty young female leader to correctly analyze her personality and evil intentions).
It still blows my mind that even when politicians in high positions of power have seen completely contradictory evidence, they are still willing to continue giving chances to someone like Kim Yo Jong simply because she’s a woman.
I can’t understand WHY anyone would lack the common sense that precisely BECAUSE she is a woman in a highly patriarchal and misogynistic state, she MUST be ten times more unforgiving, ten times more cruel, ten times more calculating, ten times more dangerous- you get the picture - that her brother and any of her male counterparts (which for now, would only be her brother, as he is the only adult individual aside from her with the mythological - and totally wildly fictitious - “Mount Paektu” blood).
A major downside to having so few concrete facts, of course, is that the book will often be filled with repetition of facts and statements, as well as detailed explanations of things that really aren’t of any importance to the reader (just one instance: the color of the folders and the pens that Mike Pompeo and Kim Yo Jong handed to Donald Trump and Kim Jong-Un, respectively, during their 2018 Singapore summit).
I wish I could give it more stars, but just like all books on North Korean government, the information will be incredibly limited through no fault of the author’s. Still, I knew this when purchasing the book, so - as long as you know this going in, it’s still worth a read. The books by the defectors are great, but the one I still find most interesting to this day was “Dear Leader” by Jang Jin-Sung. (I’ll try to remember to link the book to my review when on my PC again!). With that book, you got the inside story of someone who worked AMONG Pyongyang’s “elite”, as North Korea’s former national poet and high-ranking official of their Propaganda Department (not to mention, he also met Kim Jong-Il on several occasions!).
For Yoon Lee’s effort amid incredibly limited resources, I’ll give it 3 1/2 stars. It would be impossible for anyone to pull off a five star book, save for Kim Jong-Un, to write a fully accurate expose on Kim Yo Jong (and for it to be accurate, he would have to defect… yeah, lol…not quite possible!). I’m equally fascinated and horrified by this incredibly demure, sweet looking young woman. She is the epitome of the phrase, “appearances can be deceiving”, that’s for certain.