I picked up "Launch Something!" from a shelf in an enormous book shop in Edinburgh for three reasons:
1. It's Sci-Fi, and I love Sci-Fi
2. The front cover is beautiful
3. The author is a celebrated Korean writer, and I've been watching a lot of Korean TV lately
About 1/3 of the way through the book, I felt like I'd made a mistake. It was hard to read, there were lots of interlinked characters introduced very early, and there wasn't actually much 'sci-fi' in it. No, it's more of a political drama.
But the light-hearted moments of comedy kept me going. For example:
"This is our origami expert. As I've said before, we can only fold spaceships with paper, so we can't get that kind of money. But we can however, purchase as much paper as we want."
You see, Launch Something! is a political satire of a dysfunctional Korean Space Force agency located in the middle of nowhere. There's one pilot with no ships to fly, a PR department, a weather specialist who mostly makes it up, an inspector with no accidents to investigate, a chief of intelligence who builds whatever he can from origami, a Mars relationship manager who is haunted by the phantom of an enormous stuffed teddy bear, and a K-pop star who runs the local radio... And so on. This peculiar cast of characters are faced with some of the greatest crises Earth has ever faced, and with a looming threat from Mars. All excellent people, in ridiculous jobs with no resources. Will they save the world? Won't they?
Over the course of the book as I slowly learned more about the characters, it grew on me a lot. It's not quite like anything I'd normally read, but I was thoroughly entertained.
In fact, an hour before I had to leave for a holiday I found myself desperately trying to finish the book. Rather than leave it on a cliff hanger, I simply had to know what happened. I couldn't pack it in my hand luggage, and I didn't want to bring it and have to leave the book at the airport. I didn't manage to finish it - with 10 pages left, I wandered around my airport looking for a bookshop that would sell it so I could cheekily read those last few pages.
I think a book that does that to me, is a good one in my mind. I've heard Bae Myung-Hoon's first novel, The Tower, is much better, and now that I know the style of this book, I'll eagerly be looking out for it in the future.