First edition | |
| Author | Min Jin Lee |
|---|---|
| Cover artist | Tom Hallman |
| Language | English |
| Subject | Zainichi Koreans |
| Publisher | Grand Central Publishing |
Publication date | February 7, 2017 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Print (hardback & paperback) |
| Pages | 490 |
Pachinko is the second novel byHarlem-based author andjournalistMin Jin Lee. Published in 2017,Pachinko is anepichistorical fiction novel following aKorean family who immigrates toJapan. The story features an ensemble of characters who encounterracism,discrimination,stereotyping, and other aspects of the 20th-centuryKorean experience of Japan.[1]
Pachinko was a 2017 finalist for theNational Book Award for Fiction.Apple Inc.'s streaming serviceApple TV+ produced atelevision adaptation of the novel, and it was released in March 2022.[2]
The novel is divided into three sections, whichbegin with quotations from the works ofCharles Dickens,Park Wan-suh, andBenedict Anderson, respectively.
In 1883, in the little island fishing village ofYeongdo, which is a ferry ride fromBusan, an aging fisherman and his wife take in lodgers to make a little more money. They have three sons, but only one, Hoonie, who has acleft lip andclub foot, survives to adulthood. Because of his deformities, Hoonie is considered ineligible for marriage. When he was 27,Japan annexes Korea, many families were left destitute and without food. Due to their prudent habits, Hoonie's family's situation is comparatively more stable, and a matchmaker arranges a marriage between Hoonie and Yangjin, the daughter of a poor farmer who had lost everything in the colonial conquest. Hoonie and Yangjin take over the lodging house after Hoonie's parents died.
In the mid-1910s, Yangjin and Hoonie had a daughter named Sunja. After her thirteenth birthday, she is raised by her mother Yangjin, her father Hoonie having died from tuberculosis. At age sixteen, Sunja is pursued by a wealthy fishbroker, Koh Hansu. However, she shows little interest in him until he saves her from an attempted sexual assault by three teenagers on her way home from the market, leading her to start trusting him. From that point on, Hansu spends weeks secretly meeting with her and sharing his stories of Osaka with her, with Sunja learning Hansu is aZainichi Korean; therefore, knowing fluent Japanese when threatening the teenagers. After weeks of meeting her, Hansu goes with Sunja into the forest and sexually assaults her. That day marks the beginning of an abusive affair, where Hansu repeatedly uses her for sex, while Sunja believes they are meant to be married. Sunja becomespregnant, after which Hansu reveals that he is already married but intends to keep her as his mistress. Ashamed, Sunja refuses to be his mistress and ends their relationship. Her mother finds out Sunja is pregnant, but Sunja keeps the baby's father's identity a secret. Yangjin discusses the matter with one of their lodgers, a Christian minister suffering from tuberculosis who she has been caring for since his arrival at her boardinghouse months prior. Baek Isak, the minister, believes he will die soon due to his many illnesses, and decides to marry Sunja to give her child a name and to give meaning to his life, as he believes that it is a sign from God to take care of Sunja and her future child. Sunja agrees, marries Isak, and travels toOsaka to live with Isak's brother and wife. In Osaka, Sunja is shocked to learn that Koreans are treated poorly: most are forced to live in a small ghetto and are only hired for menial jobs. Sunja's brother-in-law, Yoseb, insists on supporting the entire household on his salary. Still, Sunja and her sister-in-law Kyunghee come to learn he is in heavy debt due to paying for Sunja and Isak's passage to Osaka. To repay the debtors, a pregnant Sunja sells a watch Hansu had given her in Yeongdo. Yoseb becomes furious that the woman paid off the debt without consulting him and spends the whole night away. Meanwhile, Sunja gives birth to a son, Noa.
The novel jumps in time, and in Book II, Sunja raises her two children, Noa (Hansu's son) and Mozasu (Isak's son). While Noa resembles Hansu in appearance, he is similar in personality to Isak and seeks a quiet life of learning, reading, and academia. Shortly after Mozasu is born, a member of Isak's church is caught reciting theLord's Prayer when they were supposed to beworshiping the EmperorHirohito, and Isak is sent to prison. Despite Yoseb's resistance, Sunja begins to work in the market, sellingkimchi that she and Kyunghee make at home. Their small business is profitable, but they struggle to make money as Japan entersWorld War II and ingredients grow scarce. Sunja is eventually approached by the restaurant owner, Kim Changho, who pays her and Kyunghee to make kimchi in his restaurant daily, providing them financial security. A dying Isak is eventually released from prison, and he can briefly reunite with his family before his death.
A few years later, on the eve of the restaurant's closure, Sunja is approached by Hansu, who reveals that he is the actual owner of the restaurant and has been manipulating her family for years, having tracked Sunja down after she sold her watch. He arranges for her to spend the rest of the war in the countryside with Kyunghee and her children and for Yoseb to wait the rest of the war out working at a factory inNagasaki. During her time at the farm, Hansu also reunites Sunja with her mother, Yangjin, and eventually returns a permanently crippled Yoseb to the family after he is horrifically burned during the USatomic bombing.
The Baek family returns to Osaka, where Noa and Mozasu resume their studies. The family continues to struggle despite Hansu's help. Though they long to return to the North of Korea, where Kyunghee has family, Hansu warns them not to. Noa successfully passed the entrance exams forWaseda University. Despite Sunja's resistance, Hansu pays for Noa's entire university education, pretending it is simply because he feels responsible for helping the younger generation as an older Korean man.Meanwhile, Mozasu drops out of school and works for Goro, a man who runspachinko parlors. Mozasu meets and falls in love with a Korean seamstress, Yumi, who dreams of moving to the United States. The two marry and have a son, Solomon. Yumi later dies in a car accident, leaving Mozasu to raise their son on his own. Noa, who has continued his studies and looks up to Hansu as a mentor, accidentally discovers that Hansu is his father, and he learns of his ties to theyakuza. Ashamed of his true heritage and being linked to corrupt blood, he drops out of university and disowns his family.
Noa moves toNagano, intending to work off his debt to Hansu and rid himself of his shameful heritage. He becomes a bookkeeper for a racist pachinko owner who won't hire Koreans and lives undercover using his Japanese name, Nobuo, marrying a Japanese woman and having four children. After having abandoned his birth family and living sixteen years under a false identity, Noa is tracked down by Hansu at the request of Sunja. Though Hansu warns Sunja not to approach Noa immediately, Sunja refuses to listen to his warnings and begs Noa to reunite with her and the rest of the family. Noa promises to call, but he commits suicide shortly after Sunja leaves.
In the meantime, Mozasu has become extremely wealthy, owning his pachinko parlors and dating a Japanese divorcee, Etsuko, who refuses to marry him. Hana, Etsuko's troubled teenage daughter from her previous marriage, arrives to stay with her mother after learning she is pregnant, and later she has an abortion. Hana is drawn to Solomon's innocence, and they begin a sexual relationship. He quickly falls in love with her, giving her large sums of money, which she uses to run away toTokyo.
Years later, Solomon, now attending college inNew York City and dating a Korean-American woman named Phoebe, receives a call from a drunken Hana inRoppongi. He relays the information to Etsuko and Mozasu, who are now married. Although it is a false lead, eventually, Etsuko manages to locate Hana, who has become a sex worker. After graduating from Columbia University, Solomon takes a job at a British bank and moves back to Japan with Phoebe. His first major client project involves convincing an elderly Korean woman to sell her land to clear the way for the construction of a golf resort, which he accomplishes by calling in a favor from his father's friend Goro. When the woman dies of natural causes soon afterward, Solomon's employers claim that the deal will attract adverse publicity, and they fire him, citing his father's connections to Pachinko and implying that the woman was murdered.
With newfound resolve and a clearer outlook on life, Solomon chooses not to object when Phoebe leaves him, goes to work for his father's business, and has closure with Hana, who is in the hospital, dying of AIDS. Now an elderly woman, Sunja visits Isak's grave and reflects on her life. She learns from the cemetery groundskeeper that despite Noa's shame for his family, Noa had regularly visited Isak's grave even after moving to Nagano. This gives Sunja the closure and reassurance she needs, and she buries a photo of Noa beside Isak's grave.
Hoonie — Hoonie is the first character to be introduced in the story, born with a twisted foot and acleft palate.[3]: 3 He meets his wife, Yangjin, on his wedding day, and they have three children who die young before Sunja, their only surviving daughter, is born.[3]: 9 Hoonie dies oftuberculosis when Sunja is thirteen years old.[3]: 9
Sunja — Sunja is the main protagonist ofPachinko, appearing in all three books. Sunja is the daughter of Hoonie and Yangjin, born inYeongdo,Busan, Korea. Sunja has two children: Noa and Mozasu. While Baek Isak raised both Noa and Mozasu, he is only Mozasu's biological father. Koh Hansu is Noa's biological father.
Baek Isak — Baek Isak is a Protestant minister fromPyongyang, Korea. He is first introduced when he visits Yangjin's boardinghouse on his way toOsaka to move in with his brother, Yoseb. Sickly since birth, Baek Isak struggled with sickness until he died in Osaka.
Kyunghee — Kyunghee is Yoseb's wife, Sunja's best friend, and sister-in-law. She plays a large part in helping Sunja support their families in living, helping Sunja preparekimchi to sell.
Yoseb — Yoseb is Baek Isak's brother in Osaka, Japan. He works in a factory to support his family. He lives in Ikaino in Osaka, where most Koreans are known to live. He received a job opportunity inNagasaki in 1945.[3]: 202 He became significantly injured in the subsequent US atomic bombing of Nagasaki.
Koh Hansu — Koh Hansu is a Korean man adopted into a family oforganized crime in Japan. Koh Hansu continually strives to earn money and control what he can be using his connections. Hansu meets Sunja in Korea, even though he has a wife in Japan. Throughout the novel, Hansu utilizes his influence to look after Sunja and her family, keeping them alive. Hansu is driven by his love for his only son, Noa.
Noa — Noa is the only son of Koh Hansu and Sunja. He attendsWaseda University in Tokyo before moving to Nagano to start a new life away from Hansu and Sunja. He struggles with identity issues stemming from his biological father's associations with theyakuza. Noa marries Risa and has four children with her, twin girls, a son and another daughter.
Mozasu — Mozasu is the only son of Baek Isak and Sunja. He faces constant bullying in school and tends to retaliate with force. As a result, he drops out of school and begins an apprenticeship as a guard at a pachinko parlor. Eventually, he moves up in the ranks and establishes his parlors. Mozasu marries a girl named Yumi and has one son, Solomon.
Solomon — Solomon is the only son of Mozasu and Yumi. Solomon did not face many of the same issues as his father or grandmother growing up since his father was very wealthy. Torn about what he wants to do with his life, he attends university in the United States. Eventually, he decides to enter the pachinko business like his father.
Themes inPachinko includediscrimination,stereotypes, andpower, particularly in the context of the experiences ofKoreans in Japan during World War II.[4] Lee includes various historical themes and events in her novel, includingcomfort women and therole of women in general in a Korean society. Lee's novel highlights women taking leadership in a time when men held the primary responsibility.
The novel also highlights the motif of the gamepachinko, and the unpredictable and uncontrollable nature of the game is ametaphor for the characters' stories.[4] Lee has said that the novel's title, which was initially set to beMotherland, was changed toPachinko when, in her interviews, Koreans seemed to relate to the pachinko business.[5]
Another pattern in this novel is discussing food as a representation of wealth. From the commodity ofwhite rice to the labor involved with producingkimchi, Lee uses traditional concepts of meals to convey her message of disparity between peoples. Hansu's dynamic within his relationships is explored through his taste for high-brow,Japanese-style meals, contrasting with Noa's preference for fast meals typical for working-class Koreans. The success and motivations of the characters can be displayed through the foods associated with them.
The novel has been compared to the works ofJohn Galsworthy andCharles Dickens.[4]
Pachinko takes place between the years of 1910 and 1989, a period that includes both theJapanese occupation of Korea andWorld War II. As ahistorical novel, these events play a central role inPachinko, influencing many characters' decisions.
In an interview, Lee noted that the history ofKorean-Japanese people demonstrates "exclusion[citation needed] andotherization".[5]
The book, aNew York Times Best Seller, received strong reviews, including those fromThe New York Times,[6]The Guardian,[7]NPR,[8]The Sydney Morning Herald,[9]The Irish Times,[10] andKirkus Reviews[11] and is on the "Best Fiction of 2017" lists fromEsquire,[12]Chicago Review of Books,[13]Amazon.com,[14] theBBC,[15]The Guardian,[16] andBook Riot.[17] In aWashington Post interview, writerRoxane Gay calledPachinko her favorite book of 2017.[18] The book was named byThe New York Times as one of the 10 Best Books of 2017.[19] In 2024, it was listed #15 on The New York Times' 100 Best Books of the 21st Century list.[20]
Pachinko was a 2017 finalist for theNational Book Award for Fiction.[21]
| Year | Award | Res | Ref | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | National Book Awards | Fiction | Shortlisted | [22][23] |
| 2018 | Dayton Literary Peace Prize | — | Runner Up | [24] |
In August 2018, it was announced thatApple Inc. had obtained the screen rights to the novel for development as a television series forApple TV+. The show is expected to be produced by production company Media Res withSoo Hugh serving as showrunner, writer, and executive producer; In October 2020, the series' directors and main cast were announced: South Korean filmmakerKogonada directed four episodes, including the pilot, and served as an executive producer of the series.Justin Chon also directed four episodes. The cast includesYoun Yuh-jung,Lee Min-ho,Jin Ha,Anna Sawai,Minha Kim, Soji Arai, andKaho Minami.[25] It was released on March 25, 2022.[2]