JUN DO’S mother was a singer. That was all Jun Do’s father, the Orphan Master, would say about her. The Orphan Master kept a photograph of a woman in his small room at Long Tomorrows. She was quite lovely— eyes large and sideways looking, lips pursed with an unspoken word. Since beautiful women in the provinces get shipped to Pyongyang, that’s certainly what had happened to his mother. The real proof of this was the Orphan Master himself. At night, he’d drink, and from the barracks, the orphans would hear him weeping and lamenting, striking half- heard bargains with the woman in the photograph. Only Jun Do was allowed to comfort him, to finally take the bottle from his hands.
As the oldest boy at Long Tomorrows, Jun Do had responsibilities—portioning the food, assigning bunks, renaming the new boys from the list of the 114 Grand Martyrs of the Revolution. Even so, the Orphan Master was serious about showing no favoritism to his son, the only boy at Long Tomorrows who wasn’t an orphan. When the rabbit warren was dirty, it was Jun Do who spent the night locked in it. When boys wet their bunks, it was Jun Do who chipped the frozen piss off the floor. Jun Do didn’t brag to the other boys that he was the son of the Orphan Master, rather than some kid dropped off by parents on their way to a 9-27 camp. If someone wanted to figure it out, it was pretty obvious— Jun Do had been there before all of them, and the reason he’d never been adopted was because his father would never let someone take his only son. And it made sense that after his mother was stolen to Pyongyang, his father had applied for the one position that would allow him to both earn a living and watch over his son.
The surest evidence that the woman in the photo was Jun Do’s mother was the unrelenting way the Orphan Master singled him out for punishment. It could only mean that in Jun Do’s face, the Orphan Master saw the woman in the picture, a daily reminder of the eternal hurt he felt from losing her. Only a father in that kind of pain could take a boy’s shoes in winter. Only a true father, flesh and bone, could burn a son with the smoking end of a coal shovel.
Occasionally, a factory would adopt a group of kids, and in the spring, men with Chinese accents would come to make their picks. Other than that, anyone who could feed the boys and provide a bottle for the Orphan Master could have them for the day. In summer they filled sandbags and in winter they used metal bars to break sheets of ice from the docks. On the machining floors, for bowls of cold chap chai, they would shovel the coils of oily metal that sprayed from the industrial lathes. The railyard fed them best, though, spicy yukejang.
Excerpted from THE ORPHAN MASTER’S SON by Adam Johnson. Copyright © 2012 by Adam Johnson. Excerpted by permission of Random House, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Take a fascinating voyage through the dark tunnels, spy chambers and prison camps of North Korea. An epic novel by Adam Johnson, The Orphan Master’s Son follows the life of Pak Jun Do, a young man groomed in the hell-holes the regime sets aside for orphans. Recognized for his loyalty and instincts, he manages to rise in the ranks to become an intelligence officer; and as we follow his espionage adventures on the high seas, the deprivations and torture he witnesses in prison, and the corrupt corridors of the “Dear Leader” himself, we’re treated to a devastatingly authentic look at a world heretofore hidden from view: a North Korea rife with hunger, corruption, and casual cruelty but also camaraderie, stolen moments of beauty and love.
Hardcover : 464 pages
Publisher: Random House Inc ( January 10, 2012 )
Item #: 13-533543
ISBN: 9780812992793
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 1.16inches
Product Weight: 17.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

I was taken in by the review and WRONGFULLY thought it would be similar to Shibumi. WRONG!!
This thing starts out dull and ends dull. Dont spend your money on this piece of trash. If Adam Johnson is "one of today's greatest writers", we are in serious trouble.
DONT WASTE YOUR MONEY!!!
Reviewer: Cherrieb
I was taken in by the review and WRONGFULLY thought it would be similar to Shibumi. WRONG!!
This thing starts out dull and ends dull. Dont spend your money on this piece of trash. If Adam Johnson is "one of today's greatest writers", we are in serious trouble.
DONT WASTE YOUR MONEY!!!
Reviewer: Cherrieb
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