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RAS Book Club – February 20th – Barbara Demick’s Nothing to Envy

Posted: February 13th, 2012 | No Comments »

RAS BOOK CLUB

Monday 20th of February, 2012 at 6.30pm

The PuLi Hotel and Spa

1 ChangDe Road, JingAn District, Shanghai

璞麗酒店中国上海市静安区常德路1号

The RAS Book Club will meet to discuss NOTHING TO ENVY: Ordinary Lives in North Korea, the author, Barbara Demick will participate in the conversation giving the members the opportunity to discuss the writing, motivations, literary experience and evolution of this book. Entrance: RMB 70.00 (RAS members) and RMB 100.00 (non-members) including a drink (tea, coffee, soft drink, glass of wine). Those unable to make the donation but wishing to attend may contact us for exemption, prior to this RAS Book Club event. Membership applications and membership renewals will be available at these events.

RSVP: bookclub@royalasiaticsociety.org.cn

N.B RESERVATIONS ESSENTIAL AS SPACE IS LIMITED AT THIS EVENT

NOTHING TO ENVY: ORDINARY LIVES IN NORTH KOREA

In NOTHING TO ENVY, Demick follows the lives of six people: a couple of teenaged lovers courting in secret, an idealistic woman doctor, a homeless boy, a model factory worker who loves Kim Il Sung more than her own family and her rebellious daughter. Demick spent six years painstakingly reconstructing life in a city off-limits to outsiders through interviews with defectors, smuggled photographs and videos. The book spans the chaotic years that saw the death of Kim Il-sung, the unchallenged rise to power of his son Kim Jong-il, the devastating effects of a famine that killed an estimated twenty percent of the population, and an increase in illegal defections.

While many books focus on the North Korean nuclear threat, NOTHING TO ENVY is one of the few that dwells on what everyday life is like for ordinary citizens.  With remarkable detail, Demick brings to life what it means to be living under the most repressive totalitarian regime in the world today.  She gives a portrait as vivid as walking oneself through the darkened streets of North Korea.

Winner of the 2010 BBC Samuel Johnson prize

Barbara Demick has been interviewing North Koreans about their lives since 2001, when she moved to Seoul for the Los Angeles Times. Her reporting on North Korea won the Overseas Press Club award for human rights reporting, the Asia Society’s Osborne Eliott award and the American Academy of Diplomacy’s Arthur Ross Award.     Before joining the Los Angeles Times, she was with the Philadelphia Inquirer as a foreign correspondent in the Middle East and Eastern Europe. She lived in Sarajevo during the war in Bosnia and wrote a book about daily life, Logavina Street: Life and Death in Sarajevo Neighborhood. , Logavina Street: Life and Death in Sarajevo. Her Sarajevo reporting won the George Polk Award, the Robert F. Kennedy Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer. Demick grew up in Ridgewood, N.J. She is currently the Los Angeles Times’ bureau chief in Beijing.



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