Kim Un-Su
Author of The Plotters: A Novel
About the Author
Works by Kim Un-Su
Jab. Fiori secchi 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- 김언수
- Birthdate
- 1972
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- South Korea
- Associated Place (for map)
- South Korea
Members
Reviews
The Publisher Says: From the novelist dubbed "the Korean Henning Mankell" (The Guardian) comes a fantastical crime novel set in an alternate Seoul where assassination guilds compete for market dominance. Perfect for fans of Han Kang and Patrick deWitt.
Behind every assassination, there is an anonymous mastermind—a plotter—working in the shadows. Plotters quietly dictate the moves of the city's most dangerous criminals, but their existence is little more than legend. Just who are the show more plotters? And more important, what do they want?
Reseng is an assassin. Raised by a cantankerous killer named Old Raccoon in the crime headquarters "The Library," Reseng never questioned anything: where to go, who to kill, or why his home was filled with books that no one ever read. But one day, Reseng steps out of line on a job, toppling a set of carefully calibrated plans. And when he uncovers an extraordinary scheme set into motion by an eccentric trio of young women—a convenience store clerk, her wheelchair-bound sister, and a cross-eyed librarian—Reseng will have to decide if he will remain a pawn or finally take control of the plot.
Crackling with action and filled with unforgettable characters, The Plotters is a deeply entertaining thriller that soars with the soul, wit, and lyricism of real literary craft.
I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA NETGALLEY. THANK YOU.
My Review: Oh, you're gonna love this:
Witty, trenchant, and true. I would go so far as to say tendentious. The wonder of meeting Reseng is that his existence is so extreme, committing murders for a living, and yet so extremely simple. Show up at this place at that time and do your job...kill. Like working at a meat-packing plant or a fish cannery. People aren't in any significant way more important than cattle or catfish. In this hypercapitalist alt-Seoul, there's little enough difference paid to any even notional difference between them, when it comes to one of the Plotters making a meticulous and scrupulously untraceable plan to off the person they're being paid to murder.
Make no mistake, these are murders, and they are violent. Author Kim does not stint on the violence. What makes it different from all those ghastly Stieg Larsson clones is that it's not sexual violence. There's a modicum of sex, and even a brief interlude where Reseng, having gotten himself in the crosshairs of nasty competing assassins because his boss (and sole parent figure since he was orphaned) is getting shoved out of the business, explores domesticity. It's...bizarre. To him as well, which is why it doesn't last.
The whole novel unfolds at the strangest pace. If you've watched Squid Game or Parasite, you'll see it here: the off-kilter way pacing is handled for us calibrated to US norms. It serves the plot in all of these cases, and it makes this story's universe really *feel* genuine, lived-in, and solid. I think that's a major plus compared to most of the violent thrillers I've read.
What caused me to give the read four stars in place of another half was, in fact, the mismatch between the violence of Reseng's profession, his philosophical musings about it (I chose one illustrating what I'm talking about above), and the cool remove of his actions and reactions. These things don't work together as well as it seems to me others believe they do. It's like watching a Godard film with a boy you want to bonk and then not getting any after you've invested unrecoverable hours trying to figure out what the hell is going on.
For all that, this here's a terrific entertaining read. Alienation, outrage, warped filial devotion, blood and gore...all present and accounted for. It's a weird trip and I'm glad I took it. show less
Behind every assassination, there is an anonymous mastermind—a plotter—working in the shadows. Plotters quietly dictate the moves of the city's most dangerous criminals, but their existence is little more than legend. Just who are the show more plotters? And more important, what do they want?
Reseng is an assassin. Raised by a cantankerous killer named Old Raccoon in the crime headquarters "The Library," Reseng never questioned anything: where to go, who to kill, or why his home was filled with books that no one ever read. But one day, Reseng steps out of line on a job, toppling a set of carefully calibrated plans. And when he uncovers an extraordinary scheme set into motion by an eccentric trio of young women—a convenience store clerk, her wheelchair-bound sister, and a cross-eyed librarian—Reseng will have to decide if he will remain a pawn or finally take control of the plot.
Crackling with action and filled with unforgettable characters, The Plotters is a deeply entertaining thriller that soars with the soul, wit, and lyricism of real literary craft.
I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA NETGALLEY. THANK YOU.
My Review: Oh, you're gonna love this:
As if it wasn’t ironic enough that the country’s top assassination provider was brazenly running his business in a building owned by an international insurance company; the same assassination provider was also simultaneously managing a bodyguard firm and a security firm. But just as a vaccine company facing bankruptcy will ultimately survive not by making the world's greatest vaccine but, rather, the world's worst virus, so, too, did bodyguard and security firms need the world's most evil terrorists in order to prosper, not the greatest security experts. That was capitalism, Hanja understood how the world could curl around and bite its own tail like the uroboros serpent. And he knew how to translate that into business and extract the maximum revenue. There was no better business model than owning both the virus and the vaccine. With one hand you parceled out fear and instability, and with the other you guaranteed safety and peace. A business like that would never go under.
–and–
“People think villains like me are going to hell. But that’s not true. Villains are already in hell. Living every moment in darkness without so much as a single ray of light in your heart, that’s hell. Shivering in terror, wondering when you’ll become a target when the assassins will appear. True hell is living in a constant state of fear without even knowing that you’re in hell.”
Witty, trenchant, and true. I would go so far as to say tendentious. The wonder of meeting Reseng is that his existence is so extreme, committing murders for a living, and yet so extremely simple. Show up at this place at that time and do your job...kill. Like working at a meat-packing plant or a fish cannery. People aren't in any significant way more important than cattle or catfish. In this hypercapitalist alt-Seoul, there's little enough difference paid to any even notional difference between them, when it comes to one of the Plotters making a meticulous and scrupulously untraceable plan to off the person they're being paid to murder.
Make no mistake, these are murders, and they are violent. Author Kim does not stint on the violence. What makes it different from all those ghastly Stieg Larsson clones is that it's not sexual violence. There's a modicum of sex, and even a brief interlude where Reseng, having gotten himself in the crosshairs of nasty competing assassins because his boss (and sole parent figure since he was orphaned) is getting shoved out of the business, explores domesticity. It's...bizarre. To him as well, which is why it doesn't last.
The whole novel unfolds at the strangest pace. If you've watched Squid Game or Parasite, you'll see it here: the off-kilter way pacing is handled for us calibrated to US norms. It serves the plot in all of these cases, and it makes this story's universe really *feel* genuine, lived-in, and solid. I think that's a major plus compared to most of the violent thrillers I've read.
What caused me to give the read four stars in place of another half was, in fact, the mismatch between the violence of Reseng's profession, his philosophical musings about it (I chose one illustrating what I'm talking about above), and the cool remove of his actions and reactions. These things don't work together as well as it seems to me others believe they do. It's like watching a Godard film with a boy you want to bonk and then not getting any after you've invested unrecoverable hours trying to figure out what the hell is going on.
For all that, this here's a terrific entertaining read. Alienation, outrage, warped filial devotion, blood and gore...all present and accounted for. It's a weird trip and I'm glad I took it. show less
Eine Wahl für sein Leben hatte er nie. Raeseng ist schon in der Bibliothek bei Old Raccoon aufgewachsen und dort ganz selbstverständlich in das Metier eines Auftragskillers eingeführt worden. Doch die Lage in Seoul verändert sich, Wahlen stehen an, die Regierung schwächelt und es scheint als wenn unter den Plottern, die seit Jahrzehnten im Land entscheiden, wessen Tage gezählt sind, ein Machtkampf ausgebrochen ist. Auch Raeseng bemerkt, dass seine Arbeit kritischer wird und dass auch show more er selbst ins Visier der Plotter geraten zu sein scheint – eine Bombe in seiner Wohnung ist da doch recht eindeutig. Er forscht nach und kommt einer kleinen, aber interessanten Gruppe auf die Schliche, die ihn auf ihrer Liste stehen hat.
Koreanische Literatur ist häufig etwas härter als der durchschnittliche deutsche Krimi, auch „Die Plotter“ erfüllt in dieser Hinsicht alle Erwartungen. Menschenleben sind nichts mehr als Spielfiguren in einem Schachspiel, die bisweilen an die falsche Stelle rücken und dann aus dem Spiel entfernt werden. Ein ewiger Kampf ums Überleben, der am Ende nur einen Sieger kennen kann.
Zunächst erscheint der Auftragskiller als Protagonist eher unnahbar in seiner Abgeklärtheit und Kühle. Aber im Laufe der Handlung entwickelt Raeseng immer mehr Profil und vor allem zeigt sich seine menschliche Seite. Er ist keineswegs so gefühllos, als dass er unhinterfragt jeden Auftrag nach Vorgabe ausführt und sich keine weiteren Gedanken um seine Opfer macht. Gerade dieser humane Zug wird ihm schließlich zum Verhängnis, zeigt aber auch, dass man zwar in ein Milieu hineingeboren werden, aber trotzdem so etwas wie Mitgefühl entwickeln kann. Seine Neigung zur Literatur ist glaubwürdig motiviert, aber doch so außergewöhnlich für seinen Berufsstand, dass es die Figur umso interessanter macht.
Die Handlung ist in gewissen Maße abzusehen, die Erinnerungen Raesengs bringen diese auch weniger voran als dass sie zur Profilschärfung des Protagonisten dienen. Das Trio, das Raeseng letztlich ausmacht, hat auch eine recht unerwartete Note, in diesem Punkt kann der Roman sich wahrlich aus der Masse hervorheben: ein Mangel an Überraschungsmomenten kann man Un-Su Kim sicher nicht vorwerfen und derart eigene, ausgefeilte Charaktere findet man auch eher selten. Insgesamt ein stimmiger und außergewöhnlicher Thriller. show less
Koreanische Literatur ist häufig etwas härter als der durchschnittliche deutsche Krimi, auch „Die Plotter“ erfüllt in dieser Hinsicht alle Erwartungen. Menschenleben sind nichts mehr als Spielfiguren in einem Schachspiel, die bisweilen an die falsche Stelle rücken und dann aus dem Spiel entfernt werden. Ein ewiger Kampf ums Überleben, der am Ende nur einen Sieger kennen kann.
Zunächst erscheint der Auftragskiller als Protagonist eher unnahbar in seiner Abgeklärtheit und Kühle. Aber im Laufe der Handlung entwickelt Raeseng immer mehr Profil und vor allem zeigt sich seine menschliche Seite. Er ist keineswegs so gefühllos, als dass er unhinterfragt jeden Auftrag nach Vorgabe ausführt und sich keine weiteren Gedanken um seine Opfer macht. Gerade dieser humane Zug wird ihm schließlich zum Verhängnis, zeigt aber auch, dass man zwar in ein Milieu hineingeboren werden, aber trotzdem so etwas wie Mitgefühl entwickeln kann. Seine Neigung zur Literatur ist glaubwürdig motiviert, aber doch so außergewöhnlich für seinen Berufsstand, dass es die Figur umso interessanter macht.
Die Handlung ist in gewissen Maße abzusehen, die Erinnerungen Raesengs bringen diese auch weniger voran als dass sie zur Profilschärfung des Protagonisten dienen. Das Trio, das Raeseng letztlich ausmacht, hat auch eine recht unerwartete Note, in diesem Punkt kann der Roman sich wahrlich aus der Masse hervorheben: ein Mangel an Überraschungsmomenten kann man Un-Su Kim sicher nicht vorwerfen und derart eigene, ausgefeilte Charaktere findet man auch eher selten. Insgesamt ein stimmiger und außergewöhnlicher Thriller. show less
In South Korea if you need to get rid of someone there are plenty of hitman available. however a sophisticated assassination requires the work of a plotter - someone who plans it out so that nothing is left to chance. Reseng was rescued from an orphanage as a young child and brought up by Old Raccoon, the coordinator of the Doghouse Library, one of the kingpins of the trade. However when Reseng doesn't follow orders and kill the way he was ordered he finds himself and his world under threat. show more Caught up in power struggle between the old guard and the new, Reseng has to try to survive the only way he knows how.
It's really hard to describe this book and to categorise it. At it's heart it is a thriller about violence and organised crime in Korea but running parallel to this is the utter delight of the characterisation and the dark streak of humour that runs through. It is completely unlike any other book I have read and for that reason alone I loved it but it's such an enjoyable read, the characters get under the skin and the little vignettes are so clever. I heartily recommend this book to all! show less
It's really hard to describe this book and to categorise it. At it's heart it is a thriller about violence and organised crime in Korea but running parallel to this is the utter delight of the characterisation and the dark streak of humour that runs through. It is completely unlike any other book I have read and for that reason alone I loved it but it's such an enjoyable read, the characters get under the skin and the little vignettes are so clever. I heartily recommend this book to all! show less
"Bear provided a corpse-disposal service, albeit an illegal one...He was surprisingly cuddly-looking for someone who burned corpses for a living."
My first dip into South Korean literature and what a shrewd and explosive read. The Plotters is a mash of John Wick meets Tarantino with a good dollop of satire; I was gripped from the start. I’d never have chosen this book myself, but I received it as part of my Willoughby Book Club subscription and I’m so glad the team picked this one for me. show more
I really enjoyed Reseng’s nature and personality. He was funny, sarcastic, clever, resourceful and well-read, unusual for a killer for hire. In a real-life situation I could definitely see myself being friends with him!
Whilst this is the story of an assassin in the dodgy gangland of Seoul, it’s ultimately about change and acceptance. I will be hoping for more English translations from Un-Su Kim. show less
My first dip into South Korean literature and what a shrewd and explosive read. The Plotters is a mash of John Wick meets Tarantino with a good dollop of satire; I was gripped from the start. I’d never have chosen this book myself, but I received it as part of my Willoughby Book Club subscription and I’m so glad the team picked this one for me. show more
I really enjoyed Reseng’s nature and personality. He was funny, sarcastic, clever, resourceful and well-read, unusual for a killer for hire. In a real-life situation I could definitely see myself being friends with him!
Whilst this is the story of an assassin in the dodgy gangland of Seoul, it’s ultimately about change and acceptance. I will be hoping for more English translations from Un-Su Kim. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Members
- 914
- Popularity
- #28,064
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 36
- ISBNs
- 51
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