I found this book extremely condescending, tone-deaf, and obnoxious, which is ironic for a book supposedly all about *not* being tone-deaf and obnoxious. While there was a good blend of informative writing, anecdote, and tips for how to apply nunchi in your life, I just did not enjoy the experience of reading this book at all. While some other reviews criticise nunchi in itself, I don't have the knowledge or experience to do so, but as an Asian-American I *can* say that through the writing style, the author did seem to exoticize Asian (specifically Korean, but also generally Asian) culture. It felt like one of those annoying East vs. West commentaries, and those annoy the hell out of me. Both Eastern and Western (and specific) cultures have pros and cons, and neither is the answer. There is always some kind of trade off. Using my specific experience as a Chinese-American: Yes, America has a lot of partisanship and misinformation etc., but is it good to be censor-happy with state-controlled media in China? Yes, China education is much harder and rigorous, and arguably 'better', but is it worth the high suicide rate? These are all things to consider. I think this book ignores all the nuance. Also, it said the phrase 'read the room' WAYYY too many times for my comfort, and the overall way the author addressed 'people with no nunchi' rubbed me the wrong way. Yes, it might be helpful to be able to pick on clues like that, but it's not an excuse to treat people as inferior to others. In addition, some of the points were contradictory -- 'it isn't all about you' is a point the author mentions at some points, but then you're expected to know everything about someone else when they don't say it?? Yes, there are some basic social cues you should pick up, and no, people are not obliged to tell you everything especially if it's personal, but some things are definitely better said directly. That's why communication issues in relationships exist, people. We can't all rely on indirect clues all the time.