Min Jin Lee is a recipient of fellowships in Fiction from the Guggenheim Foundation (2018) and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard (2018-2019). Her novel Pachinko (2017) was a finalist for the National Book Award for Fiction, a runner-up for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize, winner of the Medici Book Club Prize, and one of the New York Times' "Ten Best Books of 2017." A New York Times bestseller, Pachinko was also one of the "Ten Best Books" of the year for BBC and the New York Public Library, and a "best international fiction" pick for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. In total, it was on over seventy-five best books of the year lists, including NPR, PBS, and CNN, and it was a selection for Now Read This, the joint book club of PBS NewsHour and the New York Times. Pachinko will be translated into twenty-seven languages. Lee's debut novel Free Food for Millionaires (2007) was one of the best books of the year for the Times of London, NPR's Fresh Air, and USA Today, and it was a national bestseller. Her writings have appeared in the New Yorker, NPR's Selected Shorts, One Story, the New York Review of Books, the New York Times Magazine, the New York Times Book Review, the Times Literary Supplement, the Guardian, Condé Nast Traveler, the Times of London, andthe Wall Street Journal. Lee served three consecutive seasons as a Morning Forum columnist of the Chosun Ilbo of South Korea. In 2018, she was named as one of Adweek's Creative 100 for being one of the "ten writers and editors who are changing the national conversation," and one of the Guardian's Frederick Douglass 200. She received an honorary doctor of humane letters degree from Monmouth College. She will be a Writer-in-Residence at Amherst College from 2019-2022.
"Pachinko gives us a moving and detailed portrait about what it's
like to sit at the nexus of two cultures, and what it means to
forge a home in a place that doesn't always welcome
you."--Fusion
"Pachinko is a rich, well-crafted book as well as a page turner.
Its greatest strength in this regard lies in Lee's ability to shift
suddenly between perspectives. We never linger too long with a
single character, constantly refreshing our point of view, giving
the narrative dimension and depth. Add to that her eye and the
prose that captures setting so well, and it would not be surprising
to see Pachinko on a great many summer reading lists."--Asian
Review of Books
"[An] addictive family saga packed with forbidden love, the search
for belonging, and triumph against the odds."--Esquire, "Top 10
Best Books of 2017 (So Far)"
"[An] immersive novel."--BBC.com's "10 Books to Read in 2017
"A beautifully crafted story of love, loss, determination, luck,
and perseverance...Lee's skillful development of her characters and
story lines will draw readers into the work. Those who enjoy
historical fiction with strong characterizations will not be
disappointed as they ride along on the emotional journeys offered
in the author's latest page-turner."--Library Journal (starred
review)
"A big novel to lose yourself in or to find yourself anew-a saga of
Koreans living in Japan, rejected by the country they call home,
unable to return to Korea as wars and strife tear the region apart.
The result is like a secret history of both countries burst open in
one novel. I hope you love it like I did."--Alexander Chee, author
of Queen of the Night and Edinburgh writing for the Book of the
Month Club
"A culturally rich, psychologically astute family saga."--The
Washington Post
"A deep, broad, addictive history of a Korean family in Japan
enduring and prospering through the 20th century."--David Mitchell,
Guardian, New York Times bestselling author of The Bone Clocks
"A social novel in the Dickensian vein...frequently
heartbreaking."--USA Today
"A sprawling and immersive historical work... Reckoning with one
determined, wounded family's place in history, Lee's novel is an
exquisite meditation on the generational nature of truly forging a
home."--Publishers Weekly
"A sprawling, beautiful novel."--PBS
"A sweeping, multigenerational saga about one Korean family making
its way in Japan. The immigrant issues resonate; the story
captivates."--People
"An absorbing saga of 20th-century Korean experience... the
destinies of Sunja's children and grandchildren unfold, love, luck,
and talent combine with cruelty and random misfortune in a deeply
compelling story, with the trouble of ethnic Koreans living in
Japan never far from view. An old-fashioned epic whose simple,
captivating storytelling delivers both wisdom and truth."--Kirkus
(Starred Review)
"An exquisite, haunting epic...'moments of shimmering beauty and
some glory, too, ' illuminate the narrative...Lee's profound
novel...is shaped by impeccable research, meticulous plotting, and
empathic perception."--Booklist (starred review)
"An exquisite, haunting epic."--The Smithsonian Asian Pacific
American Center & Bloom Magazine
"An intimate yet expansive immigrant story."--The Michigan
Daily
"As an examination of immigration over generations, in its depth
and empathy, Pachinko is peerless."--The Japan Times
"Astounding. The sweep of Dickens and Tolstoy applied to a 20th
century Korean family in Japan. Min Jin Lee's PACHINKO tackles all
the stuff most good novels do-family, love, cabbage-but it also
asks questions that have never been more timely. What does it mean
to be part of a nation? And what can one do to escape its tight,
painful, familiar bonds?"--Gary Shteyngart, New York Times
bestselling author of Little Failure and Super Sad True Love
Story
"Both for those who love Korea, as well as for those who know no
more than Hyundai, Samsung and kimchi, this extraordinary book will
prove a revelation of joy and heartbreak. I could not stop turning
the pages, and wished this most poignant of sagas would never end.
Min Jin Lee displays a tenderness and wisdom ideally matched to an
unforgettable tale that she relates just perfectly."--Simon
Winchester, New York Times bestselling author of The Professor and
the Madman and Korea: A Walk through the Land of Miracles
"Brilliant, subtle...gripping...What drives this novel is the
magisterial force of Lee's characterization...As heartbreaking as
it is compelling, PACHINKO is a timely meditation on all that
matters to humanity in an age of mass migration and
uncertainty."--South China Morning Post Magazine
"Deftly brings its large ensemble of characters alive."--The
Financial Times
"Effortlessly carries the reader through generations, outlining its
changing historical context without sacrificing the juicy
details...Life is dynamic: in Pachinko, it carries on, rich and
wondrous."--The Winnipeg Free Press
"Everything I want in a family saga novel, a deep dive immersion
into a complete world full of rich and complex lives to follow as
they tumble towards fate and fortune...PACHINKO will break your
heart in all the right ways."--Vela Magazine
"Expansive, elegant and utterly absorbing...Combining the detail of
a documentary with the empathy of the best fiction, it's a sheer
delight."--The Daily Mail
"Gorgeous."--Nylon.com, "50 Books We Can't Wait To Read In
2017"
"If proof were needed that one family's story can be the story of
the whole world, then PACHINKO offers that proof. Min Jin Lee's
novel is gripping from start to finish, crossing cultures and
generations with breathtaking power. PACHINKO is a stunning
achievement, full of heart, full of grace, full of truth."--Erica
Wagner, author of Ariel's Gift and Seizure
"If you want a book that challenges and expands your perspective,
turn to Pachinko...in Lee's deft hands, the pages pass as
effortlessly as time."--BookPage
"In 1930s Korea, an earnest young woman, abandoned by the lover who
has gotten her pregnant, enters into a marriage of convenience that
will take her to a new life in Japan. Thus begins Lee's luminous
new novel PACHINKO--a powerful meditation on what immigrants
sacrifice to achieve a home in the world. PACHINKO confirms Lee's
place among our finest novelists."--Junot Díaz, Pulitzer
Prize-winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao and
This Is How You Lose Her
"Lee is a master plotter, but the larger issues of class, religion,
outsider history and culture she addresses in Pachinko make this a
tour de force you'll think about long after you finish
reading."--National Book Review
"Lee shines in highlighting the complexities of being an immigrant
and striving for a better life when resigned to a second-class
status. In particular, she explores the mechanisms of internalized
oppression and the fraught position of being a "well-behaved"
member of a maligned group. When history has failed, and the game
is rigged, what's left? Throughout Pachinko, it's acts of kindness
and love. The slow accumulation of those moments create a home to
return to again and again, even in the worst of times."--Paste
Magazine
"Lee's sweeping four-generation saga of a Korean family is an
extraordinary epic, both sturdily constructed and beautiful."--The
San Francisco Chronicle
"Min Jin Lee has produced a beautifully realized saga of an
immigrant family in a largely hostile land, trying to establish its
own way of belonging."--The Times Literary Supplement
"PACHINKO by Min Jin Lee is a great book, a passionate story, a
novel of magisterial sweep. It's also fiendishly readable-the
real-deal. An instant classic, a quick page-turner, and probably
the best book of the year." --Darin Strauss, National Book Critics
Circle Award-winning author of Half a Life: A Memoir
"PACHINKO is elegant and soulful, both intimate and sweeping. This
story of several generations of one Korean family in Japan is the
story of every family whose parents sacrificed for their children,
every family whose children were unable to recognize the cost, but
it's also the story of a specific cultural struggle in a riveting
time and place. Min Jin Lee has written a big, beautiful book
filled with characters I rooted for and cared about and remembered
after I'd read the final page."--Kate Christensen,
Pen/Faulkner-winning author of The Great Man and Blue Plate
Special
"Spanning nearly 100 years and moving from Korea at the start of
the 20th century to pre- and postwar Osaka and, finally, Tokyo and
Yokohama, the novel reads like a long, intimate hymn to the
struggles of people in a foreign land...Much of the novel's
authority is derived from its weight of research, which brings to
life everything from the fishing village on the coast of the East
Sea in early 20th-century Korea to the sights and smells of the
shabby Korean township of Ikaino in Osaka - the intimate,
humanising details of a people striving to carve out a place for
themselves in the world. Vivid and immersive, Pachinko is a rich
tribute to a people that history seems intent on erasing."--The
Guardian (UK)
"Stunning... Despite the compelling sweep of time and history, it
is the characters and their tumultuous lives that propel the
narrative... A compassionate, clear gaze at the chaotic landscape
of life itself. In this haunting epic tale, no one story seems too
minor to be briefly illuminated. Lee suggests that behind the
facades of wildly different people lie countless private desires,
hopes and miseries, if we have the patience and compassion to look
and listen."--The New York Times Book Review
"Sweeping and powerful"--The Toronto Star
"The beautiful, overwhelming tone of the novel - and the one that
will stay with you at the end - is one of hope, courage, and
survival against all the odds."--The Iklkely Gazette UK
"The breadth and depth of challenges come through clearly, without
sensationalization. The sporadic victories are oases of sweetness,
without being saccharine. Lee makes it impossible not to develop
tender feelings towards her characters--all of them, even the most
morally compromised. Their multifaceted engagements with identity,
family, vocation, racism, and class are guaranteed to provide your
most affecting sobfest of the year."--BookRiot, "Most Anticipated
Books of 2017"
"The seminal English literary work of the Korean immigrant story in
Japan...Lee's sentences and the novel's plotting feel seamless, so
much so, that one wonders why we make such a fuss about writing at
all. Her style is literary without calling attention to its
lyricism."--Ploughshares
"This family saga about a Korean family living in Japan sticks with
you long after you've finished the 496th. I didn't want it to
end."--Reading Women
"This is honest writing, fiction that looks squarely at what is,
both terrible and wonderful and occasionally as bracing as a jar of
Sunja's best kimchi."--NPR Book Review
One of Buzzfeed's "32 Most Exciting Books Coming In 2017" Included
in The Millions' "Most Anticipated: The Great 2017 Book Preview"
One of Elle's "25 Most Anticipated Books by Women for 2017" BBC:
"Ten Books to Read in 2017" One of BookRiot's "Most Anticipated
Books of 2017" One of Nylon's "50 Books We Can't Wait To Read In
2017" One of Entertainment Weekly's Best New Books One of BookBub's
22 Most Anticipated Book Club Reads of 2017
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