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회사 3부작 #1

The Consultant

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The award-winning Korean smash-hit crime novel available for the first time in English-a darkly funny thriller for lovers of Dexter and Severance. You can call it murder if you want. I call it restructuring. The Consultant is very good at his job. He creates simple, elegant solutions for… restructuring. But the thing is that structures never really change-it's just the parts that disappear. The “natural deaths” he curates have been a medicine replaced here, a mechanism jammed there. Everyone can accept a stroke of fate. And how much more immoral is it, really, than marketing cigarettes or mining fossil fuels? Until his next “client” turns out to be someone the Consultant not only knows but cares about deeply, and for the first time, he begins to question his role in the vast, anonymous Company. As he starts to understand the real scope of their work, he's forced to reckon with how far he'll go to escape it-and how far they'll go to stop him. The electrifying novel from award-winning Korean thriller writer Im Seong-sun, The Consultant combines nail-biting crime fiction with a take-down of global corporate life and the dark underbelly of workplace politics.

256 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 14, 2023

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Im Seong-Sun

1 book4 followers
임성순

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 120 reviews
Profile Image for Laubythesea.
594 reviews1,956 followers
June 12, 2025
3,5 ⭐️
Como leo mucha novela negra a veces me saturo y me cuesta encontrar historias de ese género que ofrezcan algo nuevo. Por eso, cuando me cruzo con variantes originales, ¡lo disfruto al máximo!

En este caso, diría que es una mezcla de novela negra con humor. Bueno, al menos yo me he reído bastante de cómo lleva al extremo la deshumanización de las grandes corporaciones, el difuminado de la ética laboral y como la productividad es básicamente al dios al que se reza hoy en día. Socorro, que te ríes por no llorar, vaya.

La clave de este libro es como está contado: narrando en primera persona un hombre que te cuenta la historia de la empresa para la que trabaja, La Compañía. Que por cierto, quizá tú también trabajes para ella y ni siquiera lo sabes, a muchos les pasa, incluso al narrador le ocurrió. La narración es algo fría, en tanto que el consultor, te cuenta con una naturalidad pasmosa hechos como poco perturbadores. Te aviso, si te gusta empatizar con los personajes, esta no es tu novela. El protagonista es para darle de tortas, pero es parte de la crítica que el autor quiere hacer y tiene todo el sentido como personaje.

Te contará como llegó a trabajar para La Compañía y cuál pensaba que era su trabajo, y cuál es en realidad su trabajo. Las primeras páginas son geniales, perfectas para que ya piques y no puedas soltar el anzuelo. En ellas se describen algunas de las muertes más sonadas de la historia reciente para acabar con la conclusión de que los mejores asesinatos no son aquellos en los que la muerte es ambigua, sino aquellos donde la gente cree conocer claramente que ha pasado.

Entonces bueno, si, el trabajo de La Compañía es reestructurar plantillas, pero…. Asesinando a quien sobre, la optimización llevada al extremo. Una preciosa (entiéndase la ironía) estrategia empresarial a la que no le faltan clientes. ¿Cuál es exactamente el papel del consultor en este sangriento engranaje? ¿Cuál es su opinión al respecto?

Una novela de esas que hace ruido en la cabeza porque te genera bastante conflicto y te obliga a pensar tu realidad. Porque si, lo fácil es pensar que es casi surrealista y parece un capítulo de Black Mirror, pero lo verdaderamente inquietante es que retrata de maravilla la frialdad del mundo corporativo, la despersonalización, el ideal de tener empleados que no quieran pensar, solo ejecutar, en un sistema que les ha convencido de que eso es lo que está bien y nadie lo cuestiona. Eso es lo más aterrador.
Profile Image for Paul Fulcher.
Author 2 books1,961 followers
June 5, 2024
Shortlisted for the CWA Dagger for Crime Fiction in Translation

I had to call the police. But as I pressed the number I stopped. What would I tell them? I could explain things as they were. I was about to dial the number again when I thought of what I would say:

There’s been a murder, but it looks like an accident, but I actually planned it, though I didn’t plan it, I didn’t mean to and I don’t know who was behind it, but …


The Consultant (2023) is An Seonjae's translation of the debut novel 컨설턴트 (2010) by 임성순 (Im Seong-sun).

The novel begins:

Trotsky, having lost the power struggle against Stalin, fled to Mexico. Some historians say that if he had stayed in power as a moderate rationalist, the future of the Soviet Union and of Communism might have been very different. But he was neither cowardly nor cold-blooded enough compared to his rivals. Life is such that a person's positive qualities can bring him down at a critical moment.

None of Trotsky's family members escaped Stalin's watch. Pursued endlessly, they were purged one by one. It wasn't just the family. Neither his political colleagues nor his friends survived. Trotsky, who defected, was virtually confined to a small room alone. Half the world was after him. But Stalin was not satisfied with that.


Our narrator then describes Trostky's assassination by an NKVD agent, as immortalised in song by the Stranglers, but argues this was an act of terrorism, not a perfect murder. Instead he suggests Kurt Cobain's death was, if it was a murder, the perfect murder, as everyone ended up satisfied (his death was the perfect full stop to his music, which then sold in greater numbers) and even for conspiracy theorists who believe he was killed by the CIA/his record company/Courtney/a superfan, their theories can be easily disproved.

He then goes on to explain his job as a restructuring consultant:

You can call me a killer if you want. But I call this job restructuring.

세상엔 많은 구조조정들이 있다. 그러나 그중 죽음이야말로 진정한 구조조정이라 할 수 있다. 사람들은 흔히 하는 착각은 구조조정이 보다 좋고 합리적인 새로운 구조를 만드는 것이라고 믿는 것이다. 전문가로서 말하자면 실상은 이렇다. 진정한 ‘구조’는 결코 조정되지는 않는다. 사라지는 건 늘 그 ‘구조’의 구성원들뿐이다.

There are many kinds of restructuring in the world, but death is the one real restructuring. A common misconception is that people believe restructuring is done in order to create a better and more reasonable new structure. As an expert, the reality is this: a real structure never changes, it's always only the members of the structure that disappear.


Except he himself does not directly murder anyone. A former thriller writer he was hired by a mysterious and nameless 'Company' to write scripts for the perfect murder based on a case study and victim whose details they supply. Except he gradually realises these scripts are then being followed by other agents of the Company, and the victim's death, his plans playing out to perfection, being accepted as an accident/natural causes/suicide as per his script - and then the Company make him an offer he can't refuse to join them properly.

The set-up is an intriguing one, but the novel for me didn't really follow through with it to an interesting plot. And the continued non-fictional interjections through the novel on the history of assassination were a little too crudely sketched to be informative.

Perhaps this lack of follow through is in part due to a missing piece of the novel - there are various passing comments in his account of an important trip to the DRC in Africa but it's not in the novel. The Telegraph highlight this in their review and were told the publisher that "following some feedback and discussions with the author and translator" the chapter describing this trip was removed. The text was in the original Netgalley English version and at least one of the reviews - that by Isabel does suggest some problems with the DRC section.

Isabel's review also highlights another flaw with the novel - the shallow and sexist narrator. Now this is the narrator not the author, and one could say this is an accurate portrayal of a flawed character, but spending the novel in his company rather wore towards the book's conclusion which revolved around his libido-led love-life. His flaws also include a dislike of bankers and derivative markets, particularly those who structured CODs (sic) at Lehman Brothers.

Much as I'm also a fan of An Seonjae (aka Brother Anthony) and everything he has done to promote Korean literature and Anglo-Korean relations, I didn't think this was his finest work - some of the text feels clunky in English:

Lee's misfortune seemed to be no more, no less, than it really was. Such was the fate of those who were not suitable for the company. Even those who give strength to what is known as the neck of the middle class must face the vastness of the world when the title written on their business cards disappears. Anyone can go tumbling down a slope in a flash.

Overall a disappointment after a promising start - 2.5 stars.
Profile Image for Melania  Con un libro y un café .
330 reviews67 followers
March 26, 2025
¡Hola, lectores!
¿Alguna vez han pensado cómo sería inventar muertes perfectas y cobrar por ello? Reconozco que suena inquietante, pero exactamente eso es lo que plantea Im Seong-Sun en su novela “El consultor”, mi elección estrella para el reto del #MarzoAsiático de este año.
La novela nos presenta a un protagonista, un escritor frustrado, que acepta trabajar en una enigmática compañía encargada de planificar muertes aparentemente accidentales. Lo que él cree que son simples ficciones termina convirtiéndose en macabras realidades, obligándole a enfrentar dilemas éticos para los que nadie está preparado. Admito que la historia me atrapó desde el primer capítulo, precisamente porque me hizo cuestionarme hasta dónde llegaríamos en situaciones extremas.
Lo más fascinante para mí ha sido cómo el autor utiliza una narrativa fría, afilada y con toques de humor negro para lanzar una crítica feroz al despiadado mundo corporativo, donde las personas se convierten en meros números y todos parecemos, tristemente, reemplazables. Eso sí, advierto, no esperen héroes convencionales, porque aquí nadie se salva de la crítica, y eso justamente es lo que hace que el libro sea tan impactante.

Confieso que me costó conectar emocionalmente con algunos personajes, pero al final entendí que precisamente esa distancia era necesaria para reflejar la frialidad y deshumanización que denuncia el autor. Es una novela que incomoda, y esa incomodidad es la que te deja pensando una vez la terminas.
Sin duda, ha sido una gran elección de lectura para el #MarzoAsiático. Si buscan un thriller original, provocador y con mucho fondo, ”El consultor” es una apuesta segura.
Profile Image for Queralt✨.
794 reviews286 followers
January 19, 2024
I’m in two minds about this. Everything about the Consultant’s work and restructurings was fun but some chapters were… well, too focused on erections and masturbation and things that I do not particularly enjoy reading. So 2.5 rounded up because the good bits were really good.

The Consultant follows an unnamed narrator who was released from the army as the Internet was becoming a thing and he started writing thrillers in his blog. His stories are about crooked people committing murder but making sure the death is identified as accidental or natural and he eventually gets a book deal. This used to be a thing in South Korea and Japan where people who published stories and chapterized books in their blogs could get book or movie deals. The thing is that this book deal he got, was a test from The Company. And now he is hired by clients to help them restructure their companies by getting rid of pesky employees/interns.

This is your usual Korean thriller: marketed as a thriller for foreign audiences yet it is mostly a character study, like Lemon by Kwon Yeo-Sun. This was more thriller-y though since The Consultant thinks a lot about how to get rid of bodies and how to make it look natural. It also shows a Korean man growing up in a changing Korea as the Internet becomes a thing, you’ve got the writing blogs, the early dramas, Cyworld, all of it. It was a read, if only Im hadn’t wanted to let us know about all those erections…
Profile Image for Nohelia.
241 reviews75 followers
October 13, 2025
Crudo, crítico e irónico, son algunas de las palabras que se me vienen a la cabeza mientras pienso en esta obra, que, después de leer muchos thrillers, novela negra y sus derivados casi de tirón, se siente refrescante y bastante original en muchos aspectos.

Esta es la historia de un hombre sur coreano, que trabaja como "consultor" para "La compañía" un trabajo que de buenas a primeras podrías encontrar demasiado aburrido y normal, sin embargo, el trabajo de este hombre no tiene nada de normal. A él lo contrató la compañía para escribir historias, y en algún punto, él acepta convertirse en un escritor fantasma, pues recibe pagos bastante elevados, pero, cuando empieza a darse cuenta de que personas reales aparecen muertas de la misma forma que él describe en las historias que le envía a La Compañía, empieza a dudar y sospechar.

Esta es una historia que desde su premisa me atrapó, pues se me hizo bastante original y diferente a los libros que he estado leyendo, aunque debo reconocer que en algún punto supe que también me gustaba porque se sentía bastante "familiar" en algunos aspectos, por ejemplo, sentía que estaba viendo un capítulo de Black Mirror por todo el tema de La compañía, y sí bien la historia es contada inicialmente como un relato, al mismo tiempo en que el autor mezcla partes de las páginas que el protagonista enviá a La compañía, la historia se siente demasiado ligera e interesante. Es muy diferente a otros libros del género, porque tiene un tono bastante despersonalizado que representa de forma bastante cínica el mundo laboral, por lo que aquí también me recuerda a American Psycho, y es que el protagonista es igual de superficial y frío que Patrick Bateman, pues acepta lo que hace con una frialdad sorprendente y al mismo tiempo lo abraza como una profesión que le brinda cierto estilo de vida que claramente disfruta, esto se ve MUY reflejado cuando conoce a cierta chica con la que empieza a salir y le regala cosas de marca, pues él juzga mucho a esta mujer, pero básicamente se describe a sí mismo, y ni hablar del tema de las tarjetas, eso fue de lo primero que relacioné y me hizo reír.

El tono cínico y el humor negro también son dos cosas que hacen de esta novela algo completamente divertido y refrescante, pues si bien no empatizas con ningún personaje y tampoco te importa tanto el protagonista (lo cual a mi ver es parte del punto de la historia) te diviertes con él en este viaje lleno de misterio, suspenso e intriga. Algo muy interesante e importante en esta historia, es la crítica social que hay desde el principio hasta el final del libro, pero hay una parte ya hacia el final, específicamente en el capítulo de El Congo, que es y se siente tan real incluso en la actualidad, pues los seres humanos nos vemos ajenos a todo aquello que no nos afecta directamente, en ese capítulo se habla específicamente de la guerra que se lleva a cabo en El Congo y como los demás países se desentienden del problema mientras saquen un beneficio económico de esta, lo que es demasiado real y al mismo tiempo es un espejo de lo que sucede con el protagonista en esta historia, pues en algún punto supo que lo que hacía no estaba bien, pero como no le afectaba directamente, no le importaba hasta que lo hace. La historia parece sencilla, pero es mucho más profunda de lo que parece, y me gustó demasiado.
Profile Image for lasnovelasdenaiara.
1,021 reviews87 followers
June 16, 2025
La novela gira completamente en torno al trabajo del protagonista como consultor. Pero un cargo tan vago, esconde una oscura realidad: él inventa muertes
" perfectas" , otras personas más ejecutan y el cobra por ello.
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Es una crítica feroz a la competitividad y a la ambicion y evidentemente veremos como se enfrenta al dilema moral de seguir trabajando y fabricando muertes, y lo que una persona es capaz de hacer para conservar su puesto de trabajo.
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Es una novela de esas que una vez terminadas, se quedan en tu cabeza, por el lenguaje descarnadado y las situaciones que ocurren, aderezadas con un toque de humor negro. Una novela muy curiosa y original.
Profile Image for Bella Azam.
645 reviews101 followers
December 15, 2023
Average 3.5 stars.

Thank you to @definitelybooks #pansingdistribution for a review copy.
Tw: suicide,death, murder

The Consultant is slick in a sense that you are following this sort of like diary entries or autobiography (?) of an unnamed narrator of his life as a"consultant". You heard consultant but what exactly does that mean? He is an expert in restructuring, restructure the organization or a company, to rid of a cog in the machine, a simpler terms to remove a person from the society, out of the face of the earth in these supposedly natural deaths. He worked in The Company, he is the most valuable pawn for the Company, the mind and the planner. Our narrator told us from the moment he got recruited into the job he is in now, how he was an ordinary university student enlisted into the military and then was scouted to write a series of "crime novels" right after his military times. Unexpectedly, these imaginary murders he planned for a politician, pastor, a farmer turned out to be real deaths that occured a month after. Grasping with the reality, he was then become a part of the Company as the Consultant (of murders executed as natural deaths).

Both fascinating & alluring, I found the story engaging in the way we are learning about the nature of his job. He felt guilty as being part of the person responsible of these deaths yet the moment the paycheck transferred, the guilt dissipate a little which makes him a terrible human but also thats human in its rawest form of greed. The societal issues & current economic problems are well thought out because in some metaphorical way, the restructuring can also be applied to normal white collar company as people get laid off all the time with no reason leaving us to ponder upon the question does the person who decides to fire the said worker are also killers? As we kill their source of income? What makes us all different than any others?

There are context of historical or literature elements derived from other sources of assassins, the cultural aspect, the philosophies and these things amped up some of the reading experience but can be slightly jarring to me. I dont like the misogyny blatantly laid out in the book, it felt ridiculous and offensive at times, they may be played off as a joke but it gets tiring reading of how crude this can be

Its a dark humor, giving the crime noir thriller vibes with some witty remarks yet the narrator can be bland sometimes. Although once his conscience are being questioned, you will realize that even he crumbled at the feet of the Company and he is just another replaceable cog in the machine.
Profile Image for hans.
1,158 reviews152 followers
January 20, 2024
Too fascinating for an assassin related theme for how inventive I think the author crafted his characters and way of telling his story— bold, dark with a provoking perspective that highly observed on society and one’s morality as well the brutal side of a corporate world on what people would really do for power and money.

The plot brought me to uncover an engrossing tale of an assassin known as Consultant who works in curating a ‘natural death’ scenario for those who requested ‘restructuring’ service from his Company. He creates a simple, elegant with nothing obvious or messy murder premise that no one would ever expect that the subject was being killed. His plans always gone well that one day when he receives a request with a subject that he knows and cares about, he begins to question the role he plays in the vast, anonymous Company.

“I make death something tragic and realistic and satisfying at the same time. This is my expertise. You can call me a killer if you want.”

I was so intrigued with his backstory of how he started from a novice crime writer at a bulletin board to further consulting a real murder without directly involved into the scene. Bit amusing and quite satirical as he linked his musings through the capitalist and consumerism issues giving me a thought-provoking yet cunning overview of how business and power could violently corrupting one’s need and morality. Love the stylish nuance on its storytelling, those gist of romance and mystery also that enthralling list of his murder updates.

“By the time I began planning my tenth murder, I had stopped looking for reasons why my customers should die. It was a waste of time. Everyone had a good reason to die. And 'strictly speaking', no one's death is ever anyone else's fault.”

Bit psychological on the later part with an anxiety mess and distress that echoed an absorbing dynamic to both its plot and characterization— a thrill that attention-grabbing much to me as the Consultant unfolds his realisation on how easy the Company could submit for another murder and to how far he would go to escape and for them to stop him.

Truly a catchy read for a unique hitman composition especially if you love something related to societal criticism; somehow I like how the author was inspired to write this plot after the fall of Lehman Brothers when he witnessing a union rally one day with a banner written ‘restructuring is murder’.

📍plot involved suicidal scenes that might be triggering

Thank you Pansing Distribution for sending me a copy to review!
Profile Image for Nuria.
146 reviews5 followers
April 4, 2025
Empezaré diciendo que este libro me ha hecho reflexionar. Me ha gustado, pero deja una sensación agridulce, por el tema del que trata.
El protagonista es algo así como un guionista de muertes por encargo. Con esto ya nos podemos hacer una idea de la mentalidad de este sujeto. Acepta el trabajo sin pestañear.
He leído varias reseñas que critican su visión de las mujeres como objetos. Entiendo que pueda desagradar, pero no me parece en absoluto gratuito. Yo lo veo bastante coherente con el personaje y su trabajo. No muestra empatía por las personas que mueren por sus historias, por qué iba a tenerla con las mujeres? Las describe como un complemento, igual que a sus víctimas. El protagonista no tiene que ser ni buena ni mala persona, es lo que es y lo que se nos muestra. Por otro lado, las mujeres que aparecen también tienen una visión parecida de las relaciones. Al menos aparentemente. Apariencia.
Y a eso voy, ¿qué se nos muestra? Pues que desgraciadamente vivimos en un mundo en el que para muchas personas “todo vale” mientras sigamos disfrutando de nuestras comodidades. Esto se ve reflejado en el carácter materialista de los personajes, siempre pulcramente vestidos y siempre perfectos para realizar su trabajo, sea el que sea y para quien sea, con una sonrisa.
En el final, después de alguna que otra lección de historia(me quedo con la secta de la diosa Kali), el protagonista llega a unas conclusiones que ya nos va dejando caer a lo largo del libro. A mí se me hace triste pero muy realista.
No importa lo que hagas, nada va a cambiar.
Sé que no es un libro para todo el mundo, a veces se puede hacer pesado, y me atrevería a decir que en alguna ocasión le veo un punto de realismo sucio. Puede ser desagradable de leer, pero creo que es lo que pretendía el autor, porque incomoda.
Pero a mí me ha gustado por su crítica pesimista al mundo en el que vivimos, en la que nadie se libra.
Profile Image for Leo.
836 reviews120 followers
May 17, 2025
¿Puede una novela hablar del mundo laboral y al mismo tiempo parecer un thriller con tintes de humor negro? El autor no solo demuestra que sí, sino que lo hace con una voz narrativa tan particular como inquietante. Es uno de esos libros que no sabes bien cómo clasificar, y esa ambigüedad es parte de su encanto.

La historia gira en torno a nuestro protagonista, un hombre cuya profesión es tan extraña como él mismo: trabaja como "consultor" en una empresa poco convencional. Pero no esperes auditorías o consejos sobre liderazgo. Su trabajo consiste en eliminar, sí, en el sentido más literal de la palabra a empleados considerados "innecesarios" dentro de las estructuras corporativas. No hay emoción en su voz, no hay juicio moral. Solo un cumplimiento meticuloso de su labor. Todo es eficiente, limpio, casi burocrático.

Cuando es contratado por una compañía tecnológica, su llegada desata una mezcla de curiosidad, desconfianza y miedo. El ambiente se vuelve cada vez más tenso, y los empleados comienzan a preguntarse si serán los siguientes en desaparecer. La novela no se centra tanto en la violencia explícita (aunque la hay), sino en el clima de paranoia, en la despersonalización de las relaciones humanas dentro del entorno laboral, y en la escalofriante lógica con la que se justifican actos impensables en nombre de la productividad.

Lo que hace especialmente interesante esta obra es el contraste entre el tono casi clínico del narrador y la crudeza de los hechos que describe. A lo largo de las páginas, uno empieza a notar que lo realmente perturbador no es tanto lo que hace el consultor, sino lo fácil que resulta aceptarlo dentro de un sistema empresarial que premia la eficacia por encima de todo.

Es un libro raro, sí. Pero también necesario. Y probablemente, después de leerlo, no volverás a ver a tu jefe (ni a los departamentos de recursos humanos) con los mismos ojos.
Profile Image for Varvara.
194 reviews27 followers
January 2, 2023
Скучнее и примитивнее, чем казалось по аннотации. Но для ленивого отпускного чтения очень подходит :)
Profile Image for Frankie.
668 reviews178 followers
June 12, 2025
Got this because I wanted a fun, thrilling satire about the corporate world and it delivered... during the first half. Second half was underwhelming. I understand that the point is the MC's powerlessness and how his passivity is a crime in itself. Capitalism makes our decisions for us and it's so easy to sit back and keep working for an unethical company because it pays good money and you don't personally meet all the people who suffer as a consequence. But I just wanted more depth, a little more rumination. Still glad I picked it up but it should have been longer.
Profile Image for Yooyii.
180 reviews2 followers
September 7, 2024
3

La premisa del libro es buena, sin embargo el relato no me atrajo y se desmorona mientras avanza. Siento que el personaje principal y narrador carece de carisma, no hay nada en su historia que me haya interesado y eso es muy malo. Es un personaje plano a pesar de lo que hace...

Aún no encuentro un escritor surcoreano que se convierta en favorito:(

(Le había puesto 3.5, pero le bajé a 3 mientras escribía la reseña y lo pensaba mejor)
Profile Image for Meredith Goulburn.
104 reviews1 follower
November 23, 2024
Weird but interesting storyline. Translation seemed choppy. Or maybe that’s just how the author writes. Over I enjoyed it. 3.5 stars.
Profile Image for Loosh.
148 reviews2 followers
November 24, 2024
I liked the premise of the book but the ending plot fell a bit short and abrupt
Profile Image for Alexa.
125 reviews11 followers
June 15, 2024
DNF. (read half of it)
'I don't think this is a world where there can be goals in life.'
I really wanted to rate this higher in fact I stopped at page 105 as I found the protagonists relationships with vacuous women highly irritating along with the women. In fact you could describe the book as vacuous, empty as it lacked affect.
It began as an intelligent exploration of the corporate system and the systemic violence of the capitalist system and those who are complicit and seemingly innocent extending into the financial futures market. The sexual content (up to where I read) was low level and not too vulgar but really I have no interest in other people' sex lives and that includes fictional characters.
In parts it took me right back to College regarding the stats and my mind went to recent serial cases in the uk medical professional with regards to that he is absolutely right.

'Our actions are determined by our desires, and we have a desire-based orientation.' Within social confines this is partly true.

A book on human nature and what drives us through the narrative of a corporate killer.
369 reviews48 followers
December 5, 2024
3.5 / 5.0

A very short read, it’s very different to all the other books I’ve read. It is heavily sexualised so if that’s not your cup of tea this book is not for you. I think the plot, the ambiguous-ness of the plot and how unpredictable everything is draw you in.

The consultant is great at his job, he specialised in restructuring making detailed plans which is easily followed to be executed- where his work involves plot deaths for real people under the guise of ‘ a short form book’ rather than characters. As he is writing these inventive, genius ways to commit murders, he stumbles across a new arrival which details the exact plot of his ‘book’ in real life form. But things take a turn, when his next character is someone he knows and cares deeply about.

Definitely a book to read if you’re super curious- a short book less than 200 pages which is easy to manage! Read at your own curiosity!
Profile Image for Dana_can_read.
84 reviews2 followers
October 22, 2023
How does every summary of this book include “funny” and “satirical”. I found zero humor of any kind in this book.
The concept is very intriguing - it’s a story told from an assassin’s perspective. There are a few mellow plot twists. The suspense is strong in the first half of the book, and then it goes downhill.
I did not appreciate the misogyny. The main guy was also too weak and boring, always blaming himself and being very dramatic about it.
The second half of the book was too weird (and not in a good way), the ending didn’t match the book.
Overall, I have no regrets about reading this book, but can’t recommend it, neither will I ever re-read it.
Profile Image for Chrys.
1,230 reviews14 followers
November 12, 2023
I really wanted to like this more than I did, it just didn’t hit right at all. There was no tension, I expected a thriller but that’s on me. I wanted to know more about the company but was left dissatisfied. And I really didn’t like the main character, he was really irritating, maybe I missed the humour or something, but this was not for me.
Profile Image for Monna.
12 reviews
March 9, 2025
1.5 ⭐

Tenía expectativas y quedé decepcionada. El formato de escritura y narración es aburrido y la forma en la que sexualiza a más no poder a la mujer es horrible al igual que la necesidad que tiene de mencionar cada vez que ve a una la forma de su trasero y las ganas de masturbarse y ver porno japones, por?

Pero son interesantes las muertes, nada más.
Profile Image for Cather.
59 reviews5 followers
July 20, 2024
No he podido ni terminarlo. El personaje principal, que es también el narrador, me pareció tan desagradable que dejé de leer.
Profile Image for Marcelo Gonzalez.
43 reviews8 followers
November 10, 2024
Una novela negra con humor negro brutal. Un asesino que se descubre asesino y carga con problemas morales y éticos. Filosofía de la posmodernidad pura, desde Corea del Sur. Tremenda.
Profile Image for Mariota.
859 reviews42 followers
July 22, 2025
Primer libro que leo del autor. Tiene muy buenas críticas y la verdad no es un libro corriente.
El autor nos presenta a: El Consultor. La Compañía se fija en él y le contrata. ¿Cuál va a ser su trabajo? Despedir a las personas debido a una reestructuración de la empresa... Pero, no es un despido cualquiera, no. El Consultor diseña el asesinato perfecto, para no ser descubierto, y que se crea que es una muerte natural.
El libro nos muestra la vida de El Consultor desde que aplica por el empleo hasta su situación actual. Vemos cómo se va planteando su trabajo, cómo lo va haciendo y las dudas que tiene.
Me ha entretenido.
Profile Image for Laura ✯.
254 reviews
April 5, 2025
“Todos actuamos de acuerdo con nuestros deseos. Nada ocurre por causalidad, ni siquiera las decisiones más pequeñas, de las que no somos conscientes.”

3.7

Le tenía gran expectativa pero no sé, algo me dejó como plana, quizá es el estilo crudo para escribir o porque explican que el autor tuvo como un “bloqueo escritor” y casi no lo puede terminar a raíz de la pérdida de un ser querido.

La esencia de la historia me parece bastante interesante (o será la traducción ? ) aunque siento que le falta como fuerza. Es sencillo de leer y mi recomendación es que lo lea porque le llamó la atención la sinopsis.
Profile Image for Lucy.
163 reviews1 follower
January 17, 2025
This was 60% fun and the other 40% was either confusing, filler/irrelevant, or a bit weirdly sexual. Narrator is a yapper (just like me).
Profile Image for Iris.
691 reviews25 followers
March 17, 2025
Me gustó la propuesta y la crítica que hace, lástima que solo los primeros 7 capítulos estuvieron buenos.
Profile Image for Holly.
128 reviews20 followers
July 29, 2024
Crime! Kafka! KPMG!
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