Pachinko
2017 · Min Jin Lee · 512 pages · Historical Fiction
Min Jin Lee's multigenerational saga follows a Korean family across nearly a century, from a small fishing village in Japanese-occupied Korea to the pachinko parlors and corporate offices of modern Japan. It's a sweeping, patient, deeply humane novel about identity, discrimination, sacrifice, and the ways that history marks families for generations. Lee writes with clarity and compassion, and her characters feel like people you know rather than figures in a historical panorama. The pacing requires patience, and some readers want more interiority than Lee provides. But the cumulative emotional impact is enormous. By the time you finish, the weight of four generations of struggle and endurance sits with you in a way that few novels achieve.