Saturday, February 27, 2021

Review: In Order to Live by Yeonmi Park - North Korea

 In Order to Live - Yeonmi Park / Park Yeonmi    https://www.yeonmi.com/





“We all have our own deserts.  They may not be the same as my desert, but we all have to cross them to find a purpose life and be free.”


“We weren’t capable of critical thinking because we had been trained not to ask questions.” 


“The regime wants us to be like cells in a single organism, where no unit can exist without the others…”


"I was taught never to express my opinion, never to question anything.  I was taught to simply follow what the government told me to do or say or think.”


“…is not enough for the government to control where you go, what you learn, where you work, and what you say.  They need to control you through your emotions, making you a slave to the state by destroying your individuality, …”



In Order to Live is an autobiographical  account of a young girl’s life in North Korea and her escape with her mother into China where she and her mother became sex slaves in essence before eventually finding her way to South Korea - a place she had learned to fear growing up in North Korea.  South Korea and the USA were the vilest nations on earth according to the propaganda she was taught and at one time believed.


The book isn’t the best written book, but what can you expect from a young girl who at 13 left her native country, suffered emotional trauma, and eventually made it to South Korea at the age of 15 with only the equivalent education of First or Second Grade.  The fact she was able to write a book a few years later is remarkable.  She more or less taught herself by reading after arriving in South Korea.  In about two years time she managed to pass the Korean GED and get admitted into a prestigious South Korean University where she again turned to books to improve her levels including learning English.


It was during her university years that she became "an activist”, speaking out for North Korean citizens who manage to escape but also against the human rights violations in North Korea and China including human trafficking.


I started this review with some quotes from her book that should resonant with people.  Read her book.  It isn’t written in the style of a Margaret Atwood or other highly polished author, but it tells her story in a way that is real.  Everyone should read it and think about the world it reveals.


It was interesting to note that she and I arrived in South Korea at almost the same time - August of 2009.  As far as I know, our paths never crossed.  I moved to South Korea to teach English and lived in Ansan while she lived in Asan.  I left in 2011 while she moved to the US in 2014.


I also lived and taught in China from 2013 to 2020.  I have been to some of the places she mentions in her book and know of others from people I met and got to know in China.  The corruption in China is less than before but it still exists.  There are good and bad people everywhere.  There are people who exploit others everywhere.


Other books you might want to read if you like her book.


I am Malala by Malala Yousafzai, The Story of the Girl Who Stood Up for Education and was Shot by the Taliban co-written with Christina Lamb.


Grey is the Color of Hope by Irina Ratushinskaya - Soviet Poet and Christian who escaped after years of oppression. 


I have now read books written by authors from 28 different Countries.  

Saturday, February 20, 2021

Currently reading - February 20, 2021

 It's February 20, 2021 and the books I am currently reading include:


Modern Library's Best 100 Novels of the 20th Century; Pulitzer Prize book


Goodreads List of best Novels in 2020 and also Booker Prize Author.  A Jamaican writer now living in Minnesota, USA  My friend Jack also recommended this book.
American history and politics - The foundation papers regarding the US Constitution.  
North Korean who now lives in the US detailing her life in North Korea and her escape.  

A Mexican Canadian author - I think I got this book recommendation off of Goodreads but maybe I picked it up from elsewhere

Indian Author (from India not Native American) and on the BBC Big Read Best 100 

When I finish these books, Jamaica, India and North Korea will join the 27 other countries from which I have read books written by authors from there.

Do you also read multiple books in parallel or do you tend to read 1 book, finish it and then start another?


Three Years of Reading 2018 to now

Three Years of Reading 2018 to 2021


I decided to look at where I've been so I could plan where to go






2018 - 53 books written by 30 Authors; 21 American and only 5 non-Native English speakers (16.6%); only 6 out of 30 were females (20%).  So 70 % American Authors and 80% of the Authors were male


2019 - I read 106 books written by 57 different Authors.  32 Authors (56%) were Americans; 13 (22.8%) were British while 18 (31.6%) were female.  A whopping 91.23% were native English speakers.


2020 - 100 books written by 52 different Authors.  16 were female (30.7%) and 31 were American (59.6%); 12 were British (23 %) and 5 were non-native Speakers (Ireland x2, Iceland, Russia, Poland) for 9.6%


So far in 2021 I have read 29 books written by 22 different Authors.  9 of the 22 have been female (40.9%) and 4 have been non-Native (maybe 5 technically since Ayn Rand was born in Russia) (18.2%); 13 have been American (59%) or 14 if you include Ayn Rand.


235 books from January 2018 until today.  Many of course were written by the same authors so there is overlap in the Authors.  I looked year to year and not cumulatively.  The number of authors won't equal 152 but something less.


So an Author recap:


Male authors range from 59.1% to 80%

Female authors range from 20% to 40.9%


American authors range from 56% to 70%

Native English Speakers range from 91.23% to 81.8%


Non-Native English authors range from 8.77 % to 18.2%


My goal for 2021 is to increase the non-native English authors to at least 25%.  The male /female ratio will be what it is since my focus is completing books from the Best Book lists while supplementing with non-Native English authors.  

Have you ever considered the background of the authors you are reading?  


Tuesday, February 16, 2021

2020 Final Tally

 Not a lot of foreign authors in my 2020 final tally but more diverse than the first posting.

My final tally for 2020 included 52 authors from 9 jurisdictions -

US = 31

UK = 12

Australia = 2

Ireland = 2

Canada, Iceland, Russia, Poland and Cyrus all had 1 each (Cyprus was actually a Dual Nationality - UK / Cyprus born in Cyprus and that was author Alex Michaelides).

One author, Patrick Ness, is a dual US / UK citizen born in the US but lives in London.  I included him as UK since he wrote the books from the UK.

So 59.6% were by American Authors while 90% were by Native English speakers.

What about gender?  I was surprised by the dominance of male authors.  There are 36 male authors represented and just 16 females.   So 69% were male authors.

I say surprised because many of my favorite authors are female.  But my reading list from 2020 (and indeed 2019 and 2018) came from "Best Book" lists as I am trying to finish reading books from the two lists - BBC Big Reads and Modern Libraries 20th Century with other books mixed in from Goodread lists or books I heard of from elsewhere.  

I will be interested to see how 2019 and 2018 compare.  

So far in 2021 I have completed 26 books but I haven't looked at those stats yet either as to nationality of the author nor whether they were male or female.  I will be making an effort in 2021 to read more "non-native English" authors so books written by authors NOT from one of the 6 native English speaking countries.

This morning I completed my own spreadsheet of world jurisdictions  with the authors / books compiled by https://ayearofreadingtheworld.com/thelist/.  I will try to add to that list and then start selecting books written by authors from jurisdictions from which I haven't yet read anything.



Monday, February 15, 2021

My reading in 2020

 I have started reviewing the 100 books I read in 2020 to see which authors I read and information about them. It appears I read books written by 52 different authors.  I alphabetized the list and started looking at where they were from and their gender.

The first 28 authors broke down as:

19 authors from the United States with 13 different States represented.  A couple of the authors were actually born abroad and one, Cassandra Clare appears to have moved around the world with her parents so I don't have a state assigned to her.  One of the 19 was Native American belonging to one of the Lakota Tribes (Sioux).

4 Authors were British, 2 were Irish, 2 were Irish and one was born in Cyprus but one parent is British.  I tentatively have them listed as being from Cyprus.  

Of those first 28, 20 were male and 8 female.

My mix of reading material in 2020 came from the BBC Big Read Top 200 list, Modern Library Best Novels of the 20th Century List, Goodread Best Authors and miscellaneous.

I plan to finish the statistics on 2020 but also look at 2019 and of course 2021.  

Sunday, February 14, 2021

Who is your favorite Author that isn't British or American?

 I read a lot of books.  I am a verified bookworm.  How much of a bookworm?  I have an account at Goodreads .  It shows that in 2019, I read 106 books totalling 37,681 pages.  In 2020, the number of books completed fell to 100 but the pages increased to 40,583.  So far in 2021, I've read 26 books and 11,173 pages.  So in the past 25 1/2 months, I have completed 232 books and 89,437 pages.  Note - Covid19 has been responsible for me having time to read in 2020 and so far in 2021.

I largely read books today using my Kindle.  I'm one of those people who may have several books that I am reading switching between them.  Currently I think I have 9 books ongoing.  Let's face it, some books are easier to read than others.  And some times we are in the mood where we can read a book that requires thought and sometimes we just want to read something exciting even if it doesn't make sense logically.

My goal for 2021 is to finish reading the BBC The Big Read Top 100 or the Modern Library's Best 100 Novels of the 20th Century READERS List    or both.  I've read 93 of the Modern Library 100 and 90 of the BBC 100.

I have a Google Drive page that has my book lists.  Here is the link: Tim's Best Book Lists


BUT for now, I am interested in expanding my foreign author reading.  Since I am from the USA, I have probably read mostly American Authors.  A couple of years ago, I discovered a blog - A Year of Reading the World  and I am now in the process of taking their blog and seeing if I can read a book from every country as well - no idea how long that will take.

So I will try to review the books I have read recently (past few years) to identify which countries the authors are from for which I have already read books.  Currently I know I have read books by authors from:

Afghanistan
Australia
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Brazil
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Denmark
Dominica
Egypt
France 
Germany
Iceland
Ireland
Jamaica  in progress
Japan
Mexico
Nigeria
Russia
Sweden 
Trinidad and Tobago
UK and 
USA

That is 25 Countries that I am aware of that I have read at least 1 book written by an author from that nation or locality. 

So any recommended Non-US, Non-UK, Non-Canadian authors?  Books that are written in or translated into English?

My goodreads account is https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/22491910-tim-new

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