For a totalitarian dictator to successfully run a country and make himself a godlike figure to one and all, he necessarily must isolate it from the rest of the world. North Korea was such an abstract concept to me, until Adam Johnson’s masterpiece novel and Pulitzer winner, The Orphan Master's Son, in 2012. It shook me to my knees, and gave the elusive, corrupt leader, Kim Jong-il, and his subjects—the people of the country--real substance. Like Johnson, author D.B. John has visited North Korea and spoken at length with defectors, and used his imagination to create a visceral portrait of truth through fiction. It was like stepping right into the shoes of its characters, especially the native ones. This nail-biting thriller doesn’t let up for a minute, even during its quietest moments.
There are three storylines that comprise the novel. Jenna Williams, a thirty-year-old American scholar of history who joins the CIA when recruited, in hopes of finding her twin sister, who was abducted 12 years ago from a South Korean beach when attending classes for a summer program. Jenna and her sister are children of a Korean mother and African American father. In the novel, she is sometimes more noble and heroic and just “more” than any one human contained, but it served a purpose to not only propel the story, but also to show the odds that were at stake.
The more granular and compelling characters are two North Koreans that fulfill the other two storylines. Lieutenant Colonel Cho of Pyongyang, doting father to child nicknamed Books and loving husband to his wife, was adopted years ago when he was too young to remember his biological parents. However, a background check is coming in order to allow his promotion and coming diplomatic mission to the US. If his natural parents were considered enemies of the state, it will pass on to him, with dire consequences. His story is utterly nail-biting as we follow him through truly dark waters.
The third thread of the story concerns an aging woman named Moon, who lives with her husband in what appears to be a more restricted area of North Korea, filled with poverty and hungry souls. They are at the mercy of guards and police who use intimidation and merciless punishment to keep them compliant. Over the course of an event, Moon is lured into a more or less black market place where trading is done for extra money or food, and she soon becomes a resourceful leader in this fringe community. Danger and fear keep them occupied, and a few of the traders are up to some behaviors that could bring everyone near death’s door—or at least to harsh work camps in caught.
As the different plot threads alternate, the propulsive action of the book keeps the reader—and the characters—on their toes. The corruption, menace, and peril in North Korea is almost like a character in itself. If the people don’t fully capitulate to the great Dear Leader, or show any kind of transgression on their faces, life will turn to a hellish nightmare. Even if you were never interested or knowledgeable about anything North Korean beyond the few sightings in media, at the end of the novel you will feel exuberant and breathless. The themes are universal—survival and a chance for a better future—as well as loyalty, betrayal, and family. The pages will fly from beginning to end.
4.5 stars rounded up