Exploring North Korea's Gulag System: A Ten Year Study of Pyongyang's Aquariums

The Aquariums of Pyongyang: Ten Years in the North Korean Gulag by Chol-hwan Kang is one of the best Asian History Books available. Its binding and pages are of high quality, making it easy to understand and read. Readers have expressed overall satisfaction with this book, making it a great choice for those looking to learn more about the North Korean Gulag.

Key Features:

The Pyongyang Aquarium in North Korea is a popular tourist attraction, offering a unique opportunity to view rare and precious fossils. The aquarium is equipped with hydrophobic barriers and CO2 traps to ensure the safety of its inhabitants. Visitors can also observe Ponharsis, a species of fish native to the region.
88
B2B Rating
23 reviews

Review rating details

Value for money
91
Overall satisfaction
97
Genre
78
Easy to understand
91
Easy to read
91
Binding and pages quality
94

Details of Exploring North Korea's Gulag System: A Ten Year Study of Pyongyang's Aquariums

  • ISBN-13 ‏ ‎: 978-0465011049
  • Paperback ‏ ‎: 238 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ ‎: 0465011047
  • Customer Reviews: 4.5/5 stars of 3,144 ratings
  • Publisher ‏ ‎: Basic Books; unknown edition
  • Reading age ‏ ‎: 13 years and up
  • Language ‏ ‎: English
  • Grade level ‏ ‎: 11 and up
  • Memoirs (Books): Memoirs
  • Dimensions ‏ ‎: 5.5 x 0.75 x 8.25 inches
  • Best Sellers Rank: #21 in North Korean History#728 in Traveler & Explorer Biographies#5,281 in Memoirs
  • Traveler & Explorer Biographies: Traveler & Explorer Biographies
  • Item Weight ‏ ‎: 8.5 ounces
  • North Korean History: North Korean History

Comments

Tucker Cox: The author’s narrative about his life in North Korea and his escape to the South challenges one’s willingness to believe such a harsh, Orwellian, dictatorial government even exists, let alone thrives at the expense of the governed. Yet, in the end, the sincerity of the narrative and credible description of events leave one with deep, heartfelt sympathy and compassion for those living under this brutal totalitarian regime.

United States on Oct 21, 2023

Birdie: I couldn’t put this book down. It is one of the saddest books I’ve ever read and one of the most fascinating look at how incredibly evil and tragic living in North Korea is. The author writes elegantly, clearly and is thorough. It is at times very difficult to read without crying or feeling shocked. My hope is that many more people read this true account so that this awful country can be brought to justice.

United States on May 25, 2023

Consumer Mike: A sad story of current history of North Korea. It is difficult to believe these events are still happening in today's world. Very informative. very detailed. Enlightening tale. Good Read.

United States on Apr 10, 2023

fallada: In der Schule war bei uns George Orwell's "1984" Pflichtlektüre - eine Fiktion. Dann mussten wir Filme über die Konzentrationslager der Nazis anschauen - Vergangenheit. Zweifellos alles sehr wichtige Lehrinhalte. Nichts gelernt haben wir allerdings über das politische System in Nordkorea - seit Jahrzenten Realität. Erst durch die atomare Bedrohung durch Nordkorea und den Fall Otto Warmbier im letzten Jahr habe ich begonnen, mich mit Nordkorea auseinanderzusetzen. Dieses Buch ist ein Erfahrungsbericht eines Nordkoreaners, welcher einen Großteil seiner Kindheit in einem Straflager verbrachte. Es ist sehr gut und auch sehr spannend geschrieben. Da dieser Bericht ein so wichtiges Zeitzeugnis darstellt ist es mir unbegreiflich, warum es bisher nicht ins Deutsche übersetzt wurde. In französisch, englisch und niederländisch ist es erhältlich. Gerade in Deutschland mit Gedenkstätten in Dachau und Bergen-Belsen, damit es nie wieder solche Konzentrationslager gibt, wäre es doch wichtig, darüber aufzuklären, daß ähnliche Lager immer noch existieren - und welche Manahmen die internationale Gemeinschaft unternimmt, um den unschuldigen Gefangenen zu helfen. Im Unterschied zu den...

Germany on Jul 17, 2019

S. Warfield: With this book the tally of books about North Korea I've read must be nearing a dozen and I have many more in my TBR stack. What keeps me reading is the near disbelief that a country in the 21st century can be so paranoid beyond belief and that the people of North Korea live with a complete disregard for human rights that are violated on a daily basis. They are poor, often sick and malnourished. That the Communist regime under which they live keeps everyone under surveillance must make for a life of uneasiness. The author of The Aquariums of Pyongyang spent 10 years in a prison camp before escaping with a friend to China and then on to South Korea. Without rampant bribery with goods and cash he would have found it much harder to make it out. Whether the Dear Leader, at the time Kim Jung-Il, liked it or not, if cash was available it could buy goods on the black market.

Kang Chol-hwan and his family were sent to a prison camp by association with his grandfather who disappeared and was put in a camp for making statements against the regime. The rest of the family had done nothing wrong but they were sent to a camp after enjoying a wealthy life in Japan. They moved to North...

United States on Feb 27, 2016

MisterHobgoblin: Kang Chol-Hwan is a Korean whose grandparents had lived in Japan and returned to North Korea to help rebuild the Communist nation following the Korean war. With relatives still in Japan sending money and goods, the family lived in considerable comfort in Pyongyang, even if they did have to sacrifice some of their possessions to the party. Chol’s grandfather was in charge of distribution of food and consumer goods, giving him access to pretty much whatever he wanted and making him a good person to know.

Until…

… when Chol was 9, his grandfather disappeared. The family was then required to leave Pyongyang and move to Yodok, a secure village surrounded by mountains and barbed wire. In the book, Chol describes this as a concentration camp – which it is in part. But it is also part prison, part collective farm, part re-education centre. It is something that does not have a direct equivalent in the West.

Chol narrated his story of before Yodok, during Yodok and after Yodok. Whilst some of the detail is shocking, the book is written in a positive, upbeat fashion. Chol is seen to be a lively spirit who never gives up – right from the beginning when he...

United Kingdom on Mar 29, 2015

J B: I work in the travel industry and have seen and worked with people from all over the world. One day it occured to me that I had never once met someone born in North Korea, this piqued my interest so I decided to do some research. I am in no way an expert on politics or foreign affairs or civil rights. I'm just a regular shmo who was curious about life in North Korea. Reading this book opened my eyes to a country I knew virtually nothing about. I ignorantly thought North Korea and it's leaders were just a bunch of punch lines to insensitive jokes. This book really gives the reader a glimpse into the everyday people of a nation utterly isolated from the rest of the world and denied everyday experiences many of us take for granted.

The book centers on one man born in North Korea to an affluent family with ties to Japan. He is a rare breed in the country as most North Koreans know only poverty and struggle. The book follows his early years, his families decline in favor and his ultimate imprisonment in one of North Korea's many horrifying prison camps. The majority of his young life and early adulthood is spent in one of these forced labor camps reserved for family members of...

United States on Mar 04, 2015

A. Ch Lanz: . . . außer für Leser, die in ihrer satten Gemütlichkeit unbehelligt vor sich hin dümpeln möchten !

Wer allerdings Interesse am Weltgeschehen hat, sich schon mal (oder auch noch) mit politischen Ideologien und den Grundsätzen des Kommunismus beschäftigt hat, kommt an diesem Buch nicht vorbei.

Es gibt einfach Bücher, bei denen man sich schon fast schuldig macht, wenn man von ihnen weiß und sie trotzdem nicht liest. „The Aquariums of Pyongyang“ gehört ganz sicherlich in diese Kategorie.

Als ich anfing zu lesen, stolperte ich recht schnell über einen Punkt, der mich beinahe veranlasste das Buch weg zu legen: die zumindest vordergründig übertriebene christliche Glaube und die damit vorbundene „Gott-Hörigkeit“. Als ich dann noch las, dass der damalig amtierende U.S. Präsident George W. Bush dieses Buch propagierte, war ich knapp vor kurz am AUS. Jeder hat halt so seine Vorurteile, und eines der meinen ist die Überzeugung, dass von GWB nicht viel Bemerkenswertes zu erwarten ist. Außerdem trieb mich kurz der Zweifel um, ob sich in GWB und dem Autor nicht zwei Glaubensbesessene gesucht und gefunden haben. Trotzdem las ich weiter und konnte...

Germany on Mar 11, 2014

D. Turner: The true story of growing up in the worlds most secretive state and the extraordinary circumstances belonging to the life of Kang Chol-Hwan.

I don't often read memoirs as there's so many of them about, they usually consist of a story told 100 times before and it's hard to be interested in the lives of A/B/C list 'celebs'. But Kang Chol-Hwan's story really caught my imagination and gave me a glimpse into a world darkly fascinating.

Brought up in the family of North Koreans recently reintegrated from Japan to Pyongyang, Chol-Hwan spent 10 years of his (so-called) youth in a horrific concentration camp, before fleeing the country and telling the world the real story about what actually goes on where Kim Il-Sung and Kim Jong-Il are worshiped like gods. After being indoctrinated into the 'party's propaganda and seeing the brutal work of the 'hermit kingdom's policies at their worst, there's a fascinating story here to tell.

The story was told in Korean before being published in French then translated in English and a lot of other reviews have drawn attention to this but I found it very well written and compelling in spite of this. The book was a little short and...

United Kingdom on Sep 25, 2013

Trev Go: I have been fascinated about the country for some years now, and have read most books on the subject - most recently "Nothing In The World To Envy", but this certainly gives the most detailed account of one person's experience of the hermit kingdom.

It didm't get off to the best of starts, as Kang Chol-Hwan explains in the introduction about how he's found God in a big way, and I let out a barely audible groan. It always baffles me how folk who have endured the most unspeakable and unfair cruelty, or even a personal catastophe, end up religious, but whatever. About the only other minus point is the language which is a little antiquated and quaint at times, the result of reaching American English via French I assume.

Otherwise it's compulsive read, simultaneously harrowing and touching. There is a problem rattling through a book of a whole life like this in that years are condensed into a couple of pages, and when the years are as horrific as these, the impact of such endurance can get abreviated. The writer ultimately survived on his wits, of which he has plenty. One would have to be made of stone not to be affected by all such accounts of life under the Dear Leader,...

United Kingdom on Jun 25, 2011

Exploring North Korea's Gulag System: A Ten Year Study of Pyongyang's Aquariums In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom and a New Life "In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom" - A Memoir of Survival and Hope
Exploring North Korea's Gulag System: A Ten Year Study of Pyongyang's Aquariums In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom and a New Life "In Order to Live: A North Korean Girl's Journey to Freedom" - A Memoir of Survival and Hope
B2B Rating
88
98
98
Sale off $3 OFF
Total Reviews 23 reviews 993 reviews 993 reviews
ISBN-13 ‏ ‎ 978-0465011049 978-0143109747 978-1594206795
Paperback ‏ ‎ 238 pages 288 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ ‎ 0465011047 014310974X 1594206791
Customer Reviews 4.5/5 stars of 3,144 ratings 4.8/5 stars of 26,557 ratings 4.8/5 stars of 26,557 ratings
Publisher ‏ ‎ Basic Books; unknown edition Penguin Books; Reprint edition Penguin Press; First Edition
Reading age ‏ ‎ 13 years and up
Language ‏ ‎ English English English
Grade level ‏ ‎ 11 and up
Memoirs (Books) Memoirs Memoirs Memoirs
Dimensions ‏ ‎ 5.5 x 0.75 x 8.25 inches 5.5 x 0.75 x 8.3 inches 6.35 x 1 x 9.64 inches
Best Sellers Rank #21 in North Korean History#728 in Traveler & Explorer Biographies#5,281 in Memoirs #1 in North Korean History#1 in South Korean History#141 in Memoirs #7 in North Korean History#85 in Women in History#1,419 in Memoirs
Traveler & Explorer Biographies Traveler & Explorer Biographies
Item Weight ‏ ‎ 8.5 ounces 10.4 ounces 1.22 pounds
North Korean History North Korean History North Korean History North Korean History
Before you spend your money, check out our reviews. Every time.
Best2buy Newsletter
Don’t miss out on the hottest seasonal and trendy products. Subscribe to our newsletter today.
Don’t miss out on the hottest seasonal and trendy products. Subscribe to our newsletter today.