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North Korea Journal

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In this beautifully illustrated journal based on a TV documentary, writer, comedian and world traveller Michael Palin journeys to North Korea, offering a glimpse of life inside the world's most secretive country, uncovering surprises and making friends along the way.
In May 2018, former Monty Python stalwart and intrepid globetrotter Michael Palin ventured into the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, camera crew in tow, to gain a glimpse of life in the most notoriously secretive and cut-off nation on earth. His resulting two-part documentary for Channel 5 fascinated millions and won universal plaudits.
Now he shares the journal he meticulously kept during his trip, in which he describes his experiences in a country wholly unlike any other he has ever visited: a country where you will find the Tallest Unoccupied Building in the World; where the residents of Pyongyang awake every morning to the strains of 'Where Are You, Dear General?', broadcast from speakers across the city; and where there are fifteen approved styles of haircut. He chronicles a journey of stark contrasts that takes in a gleamingly modern capital complete with triumphal statues and arches one day, and a countryside that has barely changed in decades on another. He travels to the heavily fortified Demilitarized Zone, to a centuries-old Confucian academy, and to the heart of North Korea's exquisitely beautiful mountains and lakes. He recounts conversations with official guides, teachers, propaganda artists, farmers and soldiers in which mutual incomprehension and shared humanity are constantly intermingled. And he muses on what makes people tick under a regime that to outsiders seems so utterly alien and so grimly authoritarian.
Written with Palin's trademark warmth and wit, and illustrated with beautiful colour photographs throughout, Palin's journal offers a rare insight into the North Korea behind the headlines.
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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2019
      The peripatetic Briton journeys behind the most unyielding of iron curtains. "The only advice which really saddens me is the one which seems to strike at the very essence of traveling," writes Palin (Erebus: The Story of a Ship, 2018, etc.)--namely, the warning that a foreigner in North Korea shouldn't try to mix with the ordinary people. That, of course, is the author's stock in trade, and it surprised him and his crew to find that in many instances, their North Korean handlers, true believers though they may have been, accommodated them in such matters as taking meals in ordinary restaurants filled with working-class (and highly bibulous) citizens. Palin's travelogue contains much that is expected, though with his lightly learned way of putting things, as when he writes of crossing the border from China over the Yalu River: "A socialist market economy slips away and a largely unreformed command economy starts to emerge between the flashing black beams of the bridge." His travels included a brief visit to the sacred highest peak in the land, the vision of which was marred by a vast statue to an earlier dictator in the Kim lineage. Palin is not quite as funny here as he usually is, but that's small wonder given that he is chronicling his travels to one of the grimmest places on the planet, if one with its own surrealisms--e.g., a statue that depicts, among other heroically revolutionary figures, "two women looking heavenwards, one of them carrying a chicken, the other a television." Still, one has to smile at the thought of the author showing a video of the famed Monty Python sketch known as the Fish-Slapping Dance to a bewildered audience, a member of which was concerned with whether the large fish in question was alive. Palin also works in a nice sidelong reference to Life of Brian. More somber than funny but an eye-opening look at a place that doesn't figure on most travelers' bucket lists.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from September 15, 2019
      In 2018, English actor and travel writer Palin (Brazil, 2014) set out on another journey, this time to one of the world's most secretive societies, North Korea. He embarked with few illusions. He knew how orchestrated his tour would be and how it would be a struggle to connect with ordinary Koreans. Palin also fully understood that the transgressive, Pythonesque humor that worked elsewhere could have deadly consequences for any Koreans he might encourage to deviate from approved thoughts and scripts. But his 10 days in North Korea happily coincided with a thaw in relations between North Korea and the U.S., so he did provoke some relaxation among his hosts. Although he chafed at being chided for taking photos of anything but the capital city's monumental statues of great leaders, he was eventually able to visit farms, workers' apartments, and pubs with some degree of freedom. While the people in his photos often appear reserved and stiff, his pictures also reveal the country's beauty, especially on the slopes of Mount Paektu, deeply sacred to Koreans.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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