Rating:  Summary: A Strong First Effort Review: Although not without its flaws, it is an engrossing story told with style and vision. As most serious, educated reviewers will agree, 'The Interpreter' shows the promise of a talented and developing young writer. Who wants to guess that the previous "reviewer" has a chip on his shoulder the size of his mediocre and unfinished manuscript? Whining as a resentful, over-privileged male must be what "A reader from NY, NY" had in mind.
Rating:  Summary: One of the best I've read in quite awhile Review: As other reviewers have noted, The Interpreter offers a third-person view of one Suzy Park whose life up to now can best be described as dysfunctional. She's survived two affairs with married men (although she's remarkably comfortable in her "mistress" role), dropped out a first-rate college, drifted from job to job, and kept only one friend. Her present job, as a contract interpreter working for an agency, has held her longer than others. On one of her jobs, she translates for a witness who happens to know something about her parents, who died of gunshot wounds in 1995. She decides to investigate their death, her own past and the mysterious disappearance of her older sister Grace, who has always been distant. Although the heroine is not especially appealing (you want to shake her and send her to a therapist, pronto), her life makes sense in terms of her background. A dysfunctional life comes from a supremely dysfunctional family -- with layers of mystery. I had trouble putting the book down, although it had qualities of literary fiction and "girl books" as well as murder mystery. The author manages to give us a fresh view of New York, which has been the scene of so many novels. As I read I fondly remembered the Long Island Railroad and the stops on the Number 7 Queens line -- and the way they're counted out by riders. She also gives us a gritty but entertaining view of the Korean immigrant lifestyle as well as the realities of the legal proceedings where she translates. She reads between the lines and occasionally oversteps her boundaries, knowing immigrants have their own code and their own realities. The sense of setting and the pacing make this novel succeed, despite the unsympathetic main character and the even less sympathetic romantic entanglements. Along with Suzy, we are exposed to one mystery after another. Why did the family move so often? Where did they get money to buy a store? Where are the family's citizenship papers? Why is the sister so aloof? Who murdered the parents and why? Amazingly, Suki Kim ties up all these loose ends in the last two short chapters. The story behind the murder makes everything fit together, even the reason for her sister's aloofness (if we read between the lines). The ending is satisfying but not happy. I am reminded of the oft-quoted psychological truth: People need meaning to be happy, but meaning doesn't necessarily bring happiness. Heroine Suzy Park can now make a patterned quilt out of the scraps of her life. We're satisfied. She may never be.
Rating:  Summary: Some promise, but ultimately boring... Review: First, the good points: Kim has talent as a writer; some of her descriptions shine, and you can see that there is clear potential somewhere in there. But not with this bummer of a book. First of all, the character: Are we supposed to care about her? Brooding and morose, it's hard for the reader to sympathize with Suzy Park, the nondescript Korean American female protagonist who has all the emotions of a jellyfish. She seems to be an automaton, who, by her own admission, has an affair with a married man at the age of 20 followed by a whole string of affairs for the next decade as she seems to float through life in a comatose state. Why? What compels her? Kim goes into excessive descriptions into how emotionally catatonic, frozen and traumatized Suzy is without explaining why (she is often depicted feeling detached and spaced out--in the rain, in a feverish swoon, throwing up, during a deposition) that I wanted to shake her to her senses! And yet, we are asked to believe that her lover Michael, a disconnected character who calls her "babe" and uses glib "love talk" (with a laughably clumsy use of profanity) is madly in love with this dazed and confused woman. Yeah, right. Secondly, the plot: it hints at being a quasi-murder mystery, but rather than follow any aspects of the crime genre, Kim merely uses it as a device to delve into narcissistic angst and excessive self-moping. The clues, hints, and encounters lead nowhere, like a bad David Lynch film. It functions instead as a meditation on detached, empty existence of an ethnic minority. Anyone expecting to get a satisfactory resolution to this "mystery" will be disappointed.Meanwhile, the promising theme about being an "interpreter" between two worlds is lost. Other Korean American writers like Chang-rae Lee and Leonard Chang have used the ethnic minority as a "spy within the body" motif quite well. There could have been a good opportunity here for employing themes of trauma, mystery and immigration/ethnic identity, but Kim doesn't quite have an adequate plot or narrative structure to pull it off. At times, Kim also makes reference to American pop culture references as an example of Suzy's longing to assimilate, how she wants to have the ideal American TV family home and how her reality jars with that. But when she goes into needless descriptions of Manhattan and dialogues about Van Gogh, Nabokov, and Kurosawa's "Ran", it just comes off as pretentious and self-serving dribble. "The Interpreter" delves into an unpleasant block of depression that goes nowhere. I guess the worst thing I could say about this book is that it's boring--imagine the movie "Memento" without the plot structure. But it's a debut novel. With a tighter, more cohesive plot and less heavy handed bleakness and pretentiousness, Kim may be able to pull off a better novel in the future.
Rating:  Summary: strong debut Review: I bought this book after reading Kim's piece in the NY Review of Books, which is incredible. This book is cross-genre so it is going to bother folks who want it to be one way or the other. The author tackles complex issues in an accessible, page-turning manner. Nonetheless, Kim shirks a happy ending at the risk of alienating a mainstream following. It is a pretty move gutsy for her, so, in addition to being well written, this boldness earns her high marks.
Rating:  Summary: I love this book! Review: I can't more highly recommend this book. It is an incredible mix of genres- both a coming of age story and an intriguing mystery. The writing is poetic and it also moves. Really an achievement. It would make an INCREDIBLE movie!! I recommended this to my sister and she loves it too.
Rating:  Summary: First novel/Extraordinary Review: I could not put down Ms. Kim's novel. Absorbing in terms of the main character, Suzy Park and the geography she travels through. Beginning with the early scene in the fast food restaurant. I felt the tension and loneliness of Suzy and the potential darkness of her journey. This novel that is both noir in terms of mysterious events but also regarding Suzy's position as a young Korean woman who has painful and complex relationships with lovers and family. The darkness and depth of this first novel is extraordinary.
Rating:  Summary: A moody, noir-ish detective novel Review: I enjoyed Kim's novel because it mixed genres -- the "immigrant" novel and the detective novel. The character of Suzy is paradoxicallly intense and detached, full of her own unsolved mysteries, and is our compelling guide to worlds not often explored in recent literature. The blending of genres also allows for both exploring and exploding stereotypes of Asians in America -- Suzy's search for the reasons for her parents' deaths is simultaneously a search for how she fits into this new world they have brought her to, for how she can move beyond the "inscrutable" "Suzy Wong" stereotype into being a fully functional citizen of that world.
Rating:  Summary: A real page-turner! Review: I find it rare to find a book that entwines a highly compelling storyline with insightful social commentary. The author achieves such a double-feat here in a gripping tale of murderous intrigue refracted through the fascinating perspective of her protagonist, Suzy, a member of the '1.5' generation of Asian immigrants. From start to finish I found it impossible to put this book down, driven on by its addictive plot and seductive characters.
Rating:  Summary: Smashing first novel Review: I found this book powerful. It's rare to find a narrator who understands two cultures with such a knowing voice. The language is unique and poetic. I also thought that crossing genres, the immigrant story, the literary mystery was an idea whose time had come.
Rating:  Summary: a perceptive and original work Review: I found this book to be a very perceptive and thoughtful novel about the modern immigrant experience, girded over an effective storyline. I would recommend it to anyone looking for that next good read.
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