Cover Image: Offerings

Offerings

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Member Reviews

A well-written, engaging novel.
The author offers an interesting character and political study, wrapped up in a story of a protagonist who is trying to forge his own path. Recommended.

As an aside: this could easily appeal to fans of excellent narrative non-fiction, for example The Big Short or The Flash Boys.

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This book will be perfect for you if you enjoy Min Jin Lee, political fiction, a little bit of philosophy, family sagas etc. It is not a light read, with very complex characters are verying timelines. It may be initially difficult to keep up with the timelines as well. The central plot of the book is the Korean Financial Crisis but the plot encompasses many more topics. The book offers a powerful message of family loyalty and love.

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I found reading this book a little difficult at times trying to figure out the the financial and political language.. I realize the concept was a crucial part of the story, but felt it could have been less wordy and more ‘user’ friendly.

But the story of Dae Joon’s family and career, with the Korean connection, was well worth my perseverance.

Dae Joon emigrated from Korea to the U.S. at age 12. He was intrigued by the American way of life and chose not to follow his fathers’ wishes to keep the family tradition, but decided to become a financial expert for the New York Stock Exchange. Some 20 years after he emigrated, he was told to ‘pack his bags’ and head back to his birthplace with his firm Phipps &Sterling to create a package to rescue Korea when Asia was in financial crisis.

What I enjoyed most in this book was being involved in the Korean culture through the stories Dae Joon told of his memories of Korea and of family relations. He spends a lot of time trying to convince his father that he has chosen the right path, especially when he was in the position to help his birth land.
I give this book 3.5 stars and can recommend reading it.

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This would make a great movie. A Korean America makes his way through the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997. Returning to Korea he tries to use what he learned on Wall Street to save Korea. It is quite a story dealing with social and personal values as well as the difference in eastern and western cultures.

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Dae Joon/ Shane is a Korean-American investment banker who finds himself back in Seoul as a part of an international team that is trying to rescue South Korea from sovereign default during the Asian financial crisis. Dae Joon believes that he can make a difference in his work and break free from family tradition. His father believes that as a jangnam (firstborn son), he should stop playing with money and get a PhD instead to become a scholar like many in his family.

Let me be honest, one of the main reasons picked this book because of the pretty cherry blossoms on the cover. Little did I know that this roman à clef is by one of the richest men in the world!

I loved that Kim went back in forth in time to show the  'insider-outsider' dynamic;  growing up as an Asian immigrant in the US in the 1970s and 1980s and his links with Korea as an adult. He does a good job of explaining Korean history and culture without overwhelming the reader. Readers will enjoy the insider perspective of whats it is like to bail out a country from a financial crisis. While most millennials recall the 2007/8 financial crisis, the 1997/8 Asian financial crisis occurred at a time when the world was not as interconnected as it is in 2020.

While this book did not grab me as much as I had hoped it would, I am glad that I read it. It cemented my knowledge of the unique aspects of South Korea's political economy and cultural traditions. and got me curious about events like the Gwangju uprising. Reading parts of his childhood reflections convinced me that Kim would make a great book with a child narrator that addresses serious issues in the Korean context.

Offerings will be a great read for fans of  Min Jin Lee, Michael Lewis and anyone interested in South Korea. Let me add, in case this book gets turned into a Kdrama movie or series, I would highly recommend the same production team or at least screenplay writers from Misaeng. I am looking forward to what Mr Kim has to offer in the future.

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Although a little tedious here and there, a well-written story that covers a lot of territory -- culture, who we are, duty, family, philosophy, family expectations, finance, class, and more. It's also a little uneven, but mostly engaging. Recommended for literary fictions fans.

I really appreciate the review copy!!

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In “Offerings,” Dae Joon “Shane” Lee returns to his father’s homeland of South Korea as a Harvard-educated investment banker to aid in debt negotiations to end the Asian Financial Crisis of the late 1990s. During long hours trying to save the country he never quite knew, Dae Joon negotiates his own connection to Korea, his cultural identity as a Korean-American, and his societal responsibilities as jangnam—the eldest son of his ailing father.

Debut novelist Michael ByungJu Kim offers a fictionalized version of his own life as a Korean-American immigrant and self-made billionaire from the world of investment banking. His novel is historical fiction, with names changed to protect the innocent (and guilty) involved in the financial crisis and surrounding corporate scandal. The book’s parallel narrative timelines—the ongoing crisis negotiations and Dae Joon/Shane’s childhood—show the evolution and tormented duality of its main character’s sense of duty to father and to country.

This book about identity never quite finds its own, torn between life as a nonfiction financial history, an introduction to Korean history and phrases, with a little romance and cultural commentary thrown in. Dae Joon’s strained relationship with his dying father may have added emotional depth to the largely technical story, but gets lost amid the myriad details.

Kim’s writing does provide welcome moments of revelation and even poetry in flashes of nostalgia and reckoning, but is burdened by a first-time author’s heavy hand. Kim told Publisher’s Weekly, “as with many first-time novelists, I had so much to say.” Sometimes strength in a book is found in what is left unsaid: show, don’t tell.

Overall: “Offerings” is a decent debut novel in concept, but falls short on delivery. ★★ ½.

Thank you to NetGalley and Arcade Publishing for the opportunity to read this book in exchange for my honest review.

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You will.enjoy this book if you enjoy
*Political fiction
*Historical fiction
*In-depth character portrayal
*Family saga
*Multicultural representation

As for me, I quite enjoyed the complex characters and the writing style. It tends to become a bit too political and philosophical at times (as expected). The chapters are divided into different timelines. So in this sense the rhythm may seem a little haphazard. This is the kind of book which demands total attention and something which just cannot be rushed through. The book has been written very meticulously and with lots of effort I can say. However, as much as I am unfamiliar with the Korean culture and its history (my knowledge is too limited to k-pop, k-drama and such!) I could jot completely grasp the content of the story and its characters. However, you will get to know a lot more about such culture and yes, the story seems to drag a lot in between. The characters seem a bit too distant but yes, you won't be able to deny them as well. It's a trying read for me. But somehow I enjoyed reading it.

Thank you #NetGalley for the book #Offerings

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Offerings gives us the perspective of the Asian-American experience, which I found very well written. It can be a bit slow at times if you're not interesting in finances, but other than that a very good read.

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I was first drawn to the book by the beautiful cover. The chapters about the family’s time in Korea and their subsequent move to the United States, with all the challenges of adjusting to a different culture were the most satisfying. As well, the sections related to Shane’s parents’ lives and health challenges were also interesting and heartfelt. The main struggle I had with the story was the frequent, detailed descriptions of the financial dealings. The information became complicated at times and as it was interspersed throughout the book it took away from the flow of the story.

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