BookFrontier
A River in Darkness by Masaji Ishikawa

Book

A River in Darkness

One Man's Escape From North Korea

Masaji Ishikawa, Risa Kobayashi, Martin Brown

Amazon Publishing · Print & ebook · June 26, 2018

Reading lane: Political Lives

A New York Times bestseller and Amazon Charts Most Read and Most Sold book.

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Hard Truths

A spare, hard-edged memoir that reads cleanly and lingers longer than you'd expect.

Come here for

  • memoir energy and human-rights edge
  • a conversation-starting true story

Expect

  • accessible prose
  • personal and political tension

Book Details

Authors
Masaji Ishikawa, Risa Kobayashi, Martin Brown
Publisher
Amazon Publishing
Published
June 26, 2018
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Political Lives · Personal Memoirs
Reading lane
Political Lives

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Political Lives

  • Personal Memoirs

  • Activist Lives

About This Book

A New York Times bestseller and Amazon Charts Most Read and Most Sold book. A Goodreads Choice Award nominee for Memoir & Autobiography. The harrowing true story of one man’s life in—and subsequent escape from—North Korea, one of the world’s most brutal totalitarian regimes. Half-Korean, half-Japanese, Masaji Ishikawa has spent his whole life feeling like a man without a country. This feeling only deepened when his family moved from Japan to North Korea when Ishikawa was jus...

Read full description

A New York Times bestseller and Amazon Charts Most Read and Most Sold book. A Goodreads Choice Award nominee for Memoir & Autobiography. The harrowing true story of one man’s life in—and subsequent escape from—North Korea, one of the world’s most brutal totalitarian regimes. Half-Korean, half-Japanese, Masaji Ishikawa has spent his whole life feeling like a man without a country. This feeling only deepened when his family moved from Japan to North Korea when Ishikawa was just thirteen years old, and unwittingly became members of the lowest social caste. His father, himself a Korean national, was lured to the new Communist country by promises of abundant work, education for his children, and a higher station in society. But the reality of their new life was far from utopian. In this memoir translated from the original Japanese, Ishikawa candidly recounts his tumultuous upbringing and the brutal thirty-six years he spent living under a crushing totalitarian regime, as well as the challenges he faced repatriating to Japan after barely escaping North Korea with his life. A River in Darkness is not only a shocking portrait of life inside the country but a testament to the dignity—and indomitable nature—of the human spirit.

Similar Books