Pachinko

Pachinko

2017 • 496 pages

Ratings303

Average rating4.3

15

This book hadn't been on my radar but I have seen it around over the past few years. I picked it up when it was selected as a group read. I'm glad I got to go into it with an open mind. I came away with mixed emotions.    Beginning in the early 1900s, we meet Sunja and her family living in Korea. She meets Hansu and envisions a future with him, especially once she discovers she's pregnant. Unbeknownst to her, he has a wife and children in Japan. Refusing to see him again, she accepts the offer of marriage from Isak, an ailing minister. Together they set off for Japan to live with Isak's brother and his wife with Isak adopting Noa and raising him as his own. Parts two and three follow the lineage of Sunja's family through to the 1980s.    As I was reading the book's first part, I anticipated this being a five-star read. I was completely absorbed in the plot, characters, setting, history, writing... all of it. Part two started to lose me a little bit, especially reaching the second half of it. Part three was an absolute headache. I no longer had a grasp on the characters or the many plot lines the story now involved.    So many of the monumental moments of the book, particularly in the second half, start, occur, and end in the span of one to three paragraphs — if that. Because of this, there's no chance to build a bond with a number of the characters or their situations. After a slower build in the beginning, all of a sudden switching to fast pacing and sporadic time jumps was dizzying. I cannot recall most of this second of the book as my reading was interrupted to go back and see if I missed something, only to realize a major plot point was dropped in a singular sentence with little to no explanation around it.    I'm definitely walking away feeling disappointed after so much enjoyment in the beginning, but I'm glad I went along for the ride. 

April 10, 2024