The footnoted novel: House of Leaves, Jonathan Strange, Discworld
Pachinko is a novel that spans four generations of a Korean family, beginning with a fisherman's daughter in occupied Korea in 1910 and ending in Japan in 1989. It is a family saga and a historical novel and a meditation on what it means to live in a country that considers you foreign by definition.
The pacing is deliberate in a way that doesn't feel slow. Each generation's section earns its length. Min Jin Lee is interested in how historical forces work on individual lives — not dramatically, in the form of decisive historical moments, but persistently, as background pressure that shapes every decision a person makes.
What I remember most is the emotional restraint. The novel contains enormous suffering but the narration doesn't perform it. You feel the weight of things precisely because the prose doesn't insist you feel it.
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