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Adam Johnson: The Orphan Master's Son

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Adam Johnson The Orphan Master's Son

The Orphan Master's Son: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD FINALIST • LONGLISTED FOR THE AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION’S ANDREW CARNEGIE MEDAL • BESTSELLER Pak Jun Do is the haunted son of a lost mother—a singer “stolen” to Pyongyang—and an influential father who runs a work camp for orphans. Superiors in the state soon recognize the boy’s loyalty and keen instincts. Considering himself “a humble citizen of the greatest nation in the world,” Jun Do rises in the ranks. He becomes a professional kidnapper who must navigate the shifting rules, arbitrary violence, and baffling demands of his Korean overlords in order to stay alive. Driven to the absolute limit of what any human being could endure, he boldly takes on the treacherous role of rival to Kim Jong Il in an attempt to save the woman he loves, Sun Moon, a legendary actress “so pure, she didn’t know what starving people looked like.” In this epic, critically acclaimed tour de force, Adam Johnson provides a riveting portrait of a world rife with hunger, corruption, and casual cruelty but also camaraderie, stolen moments of beauty, and love. An Amazon Best Book of the Month, January 2012 2012 Pulitzer Prize in fiction award. “A daring and remarkable novel.” —Michiko Kakutani, “Gripping… Deftly blending adventure, surreal comedy and -style romance, the novel takes readers on a jolting ride through an Orwellian landscape of dubious identity and dangerous doublespeak.” — “This is a novel worth getting excited about…. Adam Johnson has taken the papier-mâché creation that is North Korea and turned it into a real and riveting place that readers will find unforgettable.” — “[A] brilliant and timely novel.” — “Remarkable and heartbreaking… To [the] very short list of exceptional novels that also serve a humanitarian purpose n must now be added.” — “A triumph of imagination… [Grade:] A.” — “A spellbinding saga of subverted identity and an irrepressible love.” —

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To buy some time, Ga spoke to the Senator. “Did Dr. Song not promise you in Texas that if you ever visited our great nation, the Dear Leader would inscribe his work to you?”

The Senator smiled. “This might be an opportunity to test out that pen of peace.”

“I’ve never signed one of my books before,” the Dear Leader said, both flattered and suspicious. “I suppose this is a special occasion.”

“And Wanda,” Ga said. “You wanted one for your father, yes? And Tommy, weren’t you clamoring for a signed copy?”

“I thought I’d never get the honor,” Tommy said.

Commander Park turned toward Comrade Buc’s forklift.

Brando was lunging on his rope.

“Commander Park,” Ga called. “Come with me, let’s make sure everything’s okay with Sun Moon.”

Park didn’t look back. “In a minute,” he said as he neared the forklift.

Commander Ga saw how Buc’s hands were fear-gripped on the wheel, how the figures in those barrels were turning in the heat and worn-out air. Ga got low beside Brando. He slipped the rope from the dog’s neck and held him by a fold of skin.

“But Commander Park,” Ga said.

Park paused and looked back.

Commander Ga said to him, “Hunt.”

“Hunt?” Park asked.

But it was too late, the dog was already upon him, seizing an arm in its jaws.

The Senator turned in horror to see one of his prized Catahoula dogs tearing through the tendons of a man’s forearm. The Senator then passed an appraising gaze upon his hosts, the look of dark discovery on his face suggesting that he now understood there was nothing that North Korea wouldn’t eventually make maniacal and vicious.

The Girl Rower screamed, and at the sight of Commander Park slashing the dog, at the great gouts of dog blood that began to fly, she ran hysterically toward the plane. Arms pumping, her drugged athlete’s body, dormant underground an entire year, answered the call.

Soon, the dog’s pelt was black with blood. When Commander Park slashed again, the dog shifted its bite to Park’s ankle, where you could tell the teeth had gotten to bone.

“Shoot it,” Park shouted. “Shoot the damn thing.”

MPSS agents in the crowd drew their Tokarev pistols. That’s when citizens began running in all directions. Comrade Buc sped away, weaving through the U.S. security agents who were racing to secure the Senator and his delegation.

The Dear Leader stood alone, confused. He’d been halfway through a long book inscription. Even though he stared at the bloody spectacle, he seemed not to recognize an event that occurred without his authorization.

“What is it, Ga?” the Dear Leader asked. “What’s happening?”

“It’s an episode of violence, sir,” Ga told him.

The Dear Leader dropped the peace pen. “Sun Moon,” he said. He turned to look at the pavilion, then dug the silver key from his pocket. He began trotting as fast as he could toward it, tummy bouncing inside his gray jumpsuit. Several of Commander Park’s men followed behind, and Ga fell in with them.

Behind them a protracted attack, now gone to the ground, a dog that wouldn’t relinquish.

At the changing station, the Dear Leader paused, uncertain, as if he had approached the real Temple of Pohyon, bastion against the Japanese during the Imjin Wars, home of the great warrior monk Sosan, resting place of the Annals of the Yi Dynasty.

“Sun Moon,” he called. He knocked on the door. “Sun Moon.”

He slid his key into the lock, seeming not to hear pistol shots behind him and a dog’s final death howl. Inside, the little room was empty. Hanging from the wall were three choson-ots —white and blue and red. On the floor was her guitar case. The Dear Leader bent to open it. Inside was a guitar . He thumbed a string.

The Dear Leader turned to Ga. “Where is she?” he asked. “Where did she go?”

Ga said, “And what about her children?”

“That’s right,” he said. “Her children are also missing. But where could she be with none of her clothes?”

The Dear Leader touched all three dresses, as if verifying that they were genuine. Then he sniffed a sleeve. “Yes,” he said. “These are hers.” On the cement, he noticed something. When he picked it up, he saw it was two photographs, clipped back to back. The first showed a young man, dark uncertainty on his face. When the Dear Leader flipped to the other picture, he saw a broken human figure on the ground, dusted over with dirt, mouth open and spilling with dirt.

The Dear Leader recoiled, tossing the pictures aside.

He stepped outside, where you could hear the jet’s engines ramping, its hydraulic cargo bay closing. The Dear Leader looked once around the building. Inexplicably, he glanced upward to the clouds.

“But her clothes are here,” he said. “Her red dress is right here.”

Comrade Buc arrived and dismounted his forklift. “I heard gunfire,” he said.

“Sun Moon’s missing,” Ga informed him.

“But that’s impossible,” Buc said. “Where could she be?”

The Dear Leader turned to Ga. “She didn’t say anything, did she, about going someplace?”

“She said nothing, nothing at all,” Ga said.

Commander Park joined them. He was limping. “That dog,” he said and took a big breath. He’d lost a lot of blood.

The Dear Leader said, “Sun Moon’s missing.”

Park leaned over, breathing heavily. He placed his good hand on his good knee. “Detain all the citizens,” he told his men. “Confirm their IDs. Canvass the grounds, sweep all the abandoned aircraft, and get someone dredging that shit pond.”

The American jet began to accelerate down the runway, the noise of its engines making it impossible to be heard. For a minute, they stood there, waiting until they could speak. By the time the plane had lifted and begun to bank, Park had figured things out.

“Let me go get you a bandage,” Buc said to Commander Park.

“No,” Park said, looking at the ground. “No one’s going anywhere.” To the Dear Leader, he said, “We must assume that Commander Ga had a hand in this.”

“Commander Ga?” the Dear Leader asked. He pointed. “Him?”

“He was friends with the Americans,” Park said. “Now the Americans are gone. And Sun Moon is gone.”

The Dear Leader looked up in an effort to locate the American plane, his eyes slowly panning the sky for it. Then he turned to Ga. On the Dear Leader’s face was a look of disbelief. His eyes roamed over all the options, all the impossible things that might have happened to Sun Moon. For a moment, the Dear Leader’s gaze went completely blank, and Ga knew the expression well. This was the face that Ga had shown the world, that of a boy who had swallowed the things that had happened to him, but who wouldn’t understand what they meant for a long, long time.

“Is this true?” the Dear Leader asked. “Out with the truth.”

They were in the quiet now, where the sound of the plane used to be.

“Now you know something about me,” Ga told the Dear Leader. “I’ve given you a piece of me, and now you know who I really am. And I know something of you.”

“What are you talking about?” the Dear Leader asked. “Tell me where Sun Moon is.”

“I’ve taken the ultimate from you,” Ga told him. “I’ve pulled the thread that will unravel you.”

Commander Park stood upright, looking only partly renewed. He lifted his bloody box cutter.

With a finger, the Dear Leader halted him.

“You must speak the truth to me, son,” the Dear Leader told Ga in a voice that was slow and stern. “Did you do something with her?”

“I’ve given you the scar that’s on my heart,” Ga told him. “I will never see Sun Moon again. And neither will you. From now on, we’ll be like brothers that way.”

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