- Published: 2 April 2013
- ISBN: 9780552778251
- Imprint: Black Swan
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 592
- RRP: $22.99
The Orphan Master's Son

















- Published: 2 April 2013
- ISBN: 9780552778251
- Imprint: Black Swan
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 592
- RRP: $22.99
Excavates the very meaning of love and sacrifice
New York Times
An addictive novel of daring ingenuity; a study of sacrifice and freedom in a citizen-eating dynasty; and a timely reminder that anonymous victims of oppression are also human beings who love. A brave and impressive book.
David Mitchell, author of Cloud Atlas
You know you are in the hands of someone who can tell a story. Fantastic
Zadie Smith
Johnson unleashes a big, thrilling, and fully realized talent
Jennifer Egan, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Visit From the Goon Squad
Adam Johnson has managed to capture the atmosphere of this hermit kingdom better than any writer I’ve read … The Orphan Master’s Son deserves a place up there with dystopian classics such as Nineteen Eighty-Four and Brave New World
Barbara Demick, author of Nothing to Envy: Real Lives in North Korea, Guardian
An addictive novel of daring ingenuity; a study of sacrifice and freedom in a citizen-eating dynasty; and a timely reminder that anonymous victims of oppression are also human beings who love. A brave and impressive book
David Mitchell, author of THE THOUSAND AUTUMNS OF JACOB DE ZOET
Johnson unleashes a big, thrilling, and fully realized talent
Jennifer Egan, Pulitzer prize-winning author of A VISIT FROM THE GOON SQUAD
Adam Johnson has pulled off literary alchemy, first by setting his novel in North Korea, a country that few of us can imagine, then by producing such compelling characters whose lives unfold at breakneck speed. I was engrossed right to the amazing conclusion. The result is pure gold, a terrific novel
Abraham Verghese, author of CUTTING FOR STONE
Mr. Johnson has written a daring and remarkable novel, a novel that not only opens a frightening window on the mysterious kingdom of North Korea, but one that also excavates the very meaning of love and sacrifice
Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
Johnson's imaginative gifts are in full flower [in The Orphan Master's Son]
USA Today
Remarkable... Mr. Johnson is a wonderfully flexible writer who can pivot in a matter of lines from absurdity to atrocity. We don't know what's really going on in that strange place, but a disquieting glimpse suggesting what it must be like can be found in this brilliant and timely novel
Wall Street Journal
One image that lingered in the wake of Kim Jong Il's recent death was ordinary North Koreans overcome by grief, breaking down in the street over the loss of the ''Dear Leader'' who had terrorized them for years. Could they truly be so sad about the loss of this despot? Were they acting out of fear?... The answers Adam Johnson imagines are both vivid and chilling
Entertainment Weekly
A fascinating insight into one of the world's most closed-off nations
Grazia
Adam Johnson has managed to capture the atmosphere of this hermit kingdom better than any writer I’ve read… The Orphan Master’s Son deserves a place up there with dystopian classics such as Nineteen Eighty-Four and Brave New World
Barbara Demick, author of NOTHING TO ENVY: REAL LIVES IN NORTH KOREA, Guardian
Fast-paced and intriguing.. this complex, multi-voiced narrative will remind some readers of David Mitchell’s similarly inventive tale, Cloud Atlas… It is magnificent
Financial Times
A flamboyantly grim epic of totalitarianism… this larger-than-life, two-fisted picaresque manages to be a page-turner... an ambitious book
The Sunday Times
A clever, wildly original novel, with an ultimately thrilling plot
Daily Mirror
...a feat of sorcery that is audacious and utterly unsettling... Johnson has a remarkable eye for detail... to evoke at once what it feels like to be in such a place, and how it must have felt had things been very different there, are vast feats that Adam Johnson accomplishes with ingenuity and with towering empathy
Irish Times
Adam Johnson’s novel is likely to feature among the best-of lists for 2012... highly recommended
RTE Guide, Dublin
What we have here are the ingredients of an across-the-board smash hit: sympathetic characters, an exotic, unknowable setting and a plot that will carry you along more convincingly than any of the fictions used by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
David Annand, Sunday Telegraph
The surreal peculiarities of North Korea are conjured in this brilliant multivoiced novel... laced with a mixture of parody and horror, which is all the more hilarious for being so hard to tell apart
Financial Times
Stunningly good
O: The Oprah Magazine
Remarkable and heartbreaking . . . To [the] very short list of exceptional novels that also serve a humanitarian purpose The Orphan Master’s Son must now be added
The New Republic
Like an epic version of George Orwell’s 1984, this novel ranges from the bottom of North Korea’s social ladder to its top, with plenty of affecting, wayward and even comic supporting characters. It’s the horror and absurdity of life in a totalitarian state as it might have been depicted by Balzac
Salon.com's Mid-Year Musts
One of those books where you know you’ve found yourself in the hands of someone who can really tell a story, and is yet not naïve about the artificiality of stories. The conceit is fantastic: a narration partly told through the loud speakers of the North Korean regime.
Zadie Smith