Klik op een omslag om naar Google Boeken te gaan.
Bezig met laden... The Good Son: A Novel (2016)door Jeong You Jeong
Diverse Horror (122) Horror & Thriller (44) Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. [Spoilers] Wow. Really did not like this one. I listened to it, and I ended up playing on 2x speed so I could finish it because I hate not knowing how a plot turns out and kept hoping it would get better. I did not like the audio narrator, but it was much more than that. The gruesome killing of women didn't help either. But most of all, there was nothing for me to hold onto in the story and make me care. The twists were predictable. The protagonist was unlikeable and not complex enough to be interesting. As for the end, it would have been better if he had drowned. 3.5 stars When 25-year old Yu-jin wakes up one morning, his house is strangely silent. He is used to hearing his mother at certain times every day. Not only that, he thinks he had a seizure the night before and can’t remember how or when he got home. It’s not long before he discovers his mother’s body in a puddle of blood. What happened the night before...? This was good. It was slow-moving as Yu-jin tried to figure out what had happened. It does make me, a little bit, not to want to walk by myself at night (though not possible for me to always avoid, as I don’t drive). I recently read Seven Years of Darkness by this Korean author (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/2020/08/review-of-seven-years-of-darkness-by.html ) and was intrigued enough by it to decide I’d read The Good Son, the first of her novels to be translated into English. Twenty-six-year-old Yu-jin wakes up covered in blood and finds his mother’s body downstairs. She was murdered by having her throat slit. Because Yu-jin hasn’t been taking his medication he suffers seizures and their attendant memory loss. Could he have killed his own mother? He remembers nothing from the last six hours and so desperately tries to fill in the gaps as he also tries to figure out what to do since everything points to him as the murderer. As Yu-jin pieces together the events that might have led to his mother’s death, the story becomes even darker and more disturbing than the beginning with its gruesome discoveries. He discovers some shocking details about his mother, himself, and the past. It is obvious early on that Yu-jin is an unreliable narrator. In the fourth paragraph, he admits, “honesty is neither my strong suit nor something I aspire to.” He also says things like “I had always had a gift for reshaping a scene to make it comprehensible, though Mother disparaged this skill, calling it ‘lying’” and “They say that a normal person lies on average eighteen times an hour. I probably come in a little higher than average, what with my difficulty with honesty. My extra output makes me very good at it, able to spin any kind of story in a believable way.” His propensity to lie is compounded by his faulty memory. Much of the book focuses on Yu-jin’s relationship with his mother. He begins by stating that his mother “treated me like a seat cushion – something to be suffocated and smothered.” She stopped him from continuing in competitive swimming which he loved; he felt more comfortable in a pool than anywhere else because “It was the only place Mother couldn’t barge into; it was exclusively my world.” She nagged him, constantly interrogated him about his whereabouts, gave him a curfew of 9 p.m., and strictly controlled his allowance: “she might have thought: he can’t do anything if he doesn’t have money.” When his mother adopted Hae-jin, a friend of Yu-jin’s, she tended to favour the non-biological son. Yu-jin finds his mother’s journal, and it becomes key to helping him unravel the truth. The journal entries lead to flashbacks to various time periods in the past. There is perhaps too much reliance on these diary passages, but they are a relief from the claustrophobic effect of being inside Yu-jin’s mind. The revelations are not really shocking because there are lots of clues which hint at the truth. This is not a conventional whodunit, but it is compelling. For me, the interest lay in wanting to know if my deductions were correct. Readers should be warned that this book is not for the squeamish. There are some brutally violent scenes that can only be described as soaked in blood and gore. Note: Please check out my reader's blog (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/) and follow me on Twitter (@DCYakabuski). geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
©2019. - Vertaling van: The good son. - New York : Penguin Books, ©2016. - Vertaald uit het Engels naar het oorspronkelijke Koreaans. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
Actuele discussiesGeenPopulaire omslagen
Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)895.73Literature Literature of other languages Asian (east and south east) languages Korean Korean fictionLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
Ben jij dit?Word een LibraryThing Auteur. |
Yu-Jin, a high school student who suffers from debilitating seizures, wakes one morning to a metallic smell, and finds blood everywhere. He soon makes a grisly find; the body of his murdered mother. Clearly there has been a horrendous event in the house the night before, and Yu-Jin has no memory of it at all.
As he tries to piece together what happened, Yu-Jin starts to wonder if somehow he is the villain of the piece. Several discoveries he makes lead him to question almost everything about his past and to paint his problematic relationships with his mother and his psychotherapist Auntie in a very different light from what he thought.
You-Jeong Jeong spins a complex plot that metaphorically unpeels layers of the onion to give us a deeper understanding of Yu-Jin and his past. There are some clever twists to the plot, although a couple of them are telegraphed a bit too clearly. This is a very good thriller, all the same. ( )