Pyongyang

By Guy Delisle
Image of Pyongyang: A Journey in North Korea
FormatUSUK
Paperback$14.95 Buy£9.36 Buy

A comic book that chronicles the artist’s disturbing trip to North Korea’s capital.

Experts who have recommended this book

In an interview on The Asian American Experience

Interview Extract:

Tell me about your next book.

Well, this is a comic book really, or a graphic novel if you want to make it sound more serious. Although it’s non-fiction, actually. It’s by a French guy, which is surprising. He went to Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea, to supervise an animation and he was there for two months getting to know the country. So this book is really a collection of his observations and how he saw the country and how strange it was to be there. The thing about the comic medium is that it’s perfect for representing the completely unreal state of that nation. This is a country unlike anywhere else and the comic book is more apt than any other form. There is a huge amount of propaganda in North Korea against South Korea, where I’m from. They say everyone’s spy, the living conditions are terrible and how horrible it is. But in South Korea there is the exact flip side of that. When I was growing up they said it’s terrible in North Korea, everyone’s a spy and the living conditions are horrible.

Yes, but it’s true that way round.

It is true! It is really horrendous to be there. Delisle has this guide who had to be with him all the time for the whole two months and he notices that there are no disabled people anywhere and eventually he asks the guide; Where are all the disabled people?

And the guide says; We don’t have any people like that in North Korea. We are all very healthy.

It’s terrifying to think where they might really be.

That’s right. Where are they?

Read full interview

About Sung J. Woo

A graduate of Cornell University and NYU, Sung J. Woo’s short stories and essays have appeared in The New York Times, McSweeney’s, and KoreAm Journal. His debut novel, Everything Asian (2009), has been widely praised and his short story “Limits” was an Editor’s Choice winner in Carve Magazine’s 2008 Raymond Carver Short Story Contest. He lives in Washington, New Jersey.