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NATIONAL BESTSELLER The North Korean defector, human rights advocate, and bestselling author of In Order to Live sounds the alarm on the culture wars, identity politics, and authoritarian tendencies tearing America apart. After defecting from North Korea, Yeonmi Park found liberty and freedom in America. But she also found a chilling crackdown on self-expression and thought that reminded her of the brutal regime she risked her life to escape. When she spoke out about the mass political indoctrination she saw around her in the United States, Park faced censorship and even death threats. In While Time Remains , Park highlights the dangerous hypocrisies, mob tactics, and authoritarian tendencies that speak in the name of wokeness and social justice. No one is spared in her eye-opening account, including the elites who claim to care for the poor and working classes but turn their backs on anyone who dares to think independently. Park arrived in America eight years ago with no preconceptions, no political aims, and no partisan agenda. With urgency and unique insight, the bestselling author and human rights activist reminds us of the fragility of freedom, and what we must do to preserve it. Review: Worst monotonous and sleepy book - Don't buy this book. Very boring I discontinued reading this book after few chapters. There is no storyline involving the deep struggle of North Korean people but only usa usa usa. Very boring. A girl with seven names by hyenseo Lee is much more serious and logically written on struggles and how she escaped. This book is irritating. Wasted my money. desertcart return me my money because of ur fake description i was lured to purchase it. Please give a honest description desertcart. Boring irritating book Review: Huge respect for this writer. Would recommend for all students. - I have read that Yeonmi Park is criticised for her narratives some suggesting that she is exaggerating. Even if a quarter were only true I would still admire her fortitude, intelligence, perspective and generosity in telling her story, putting her head above the parapet to help her fellow North Koreans. She loves America and is vocal in her praise of its freedoms and what the country has given to her so don't be put off when I say that In this book she takes no prisoners. She exposes the hypocrisy of the elites whom she has met and who have subsequently disappointed her because of their dependence on China. She writes of her experience at Columbia University, doing a cultural module where she is told to see things in a particular way triggering memories from the Kim past and the subsequent prevailing 'group think' that pervades , spilling into ordinary peoples behaviour on the street. An experience which inspired her to write this book. I had read her autobiography so know the point from where she comes. The enormity of her life experience both in North Korea and in China. Her insights hit hard. It is much more concisely written than her first book and I would recommend this as a book that all young people should read. Ms Park was only 29 when she wrote this book and I wish her and her son all the best for the future. She survived and could lead a life of quiet safety but she has chosen to shout. Respect.
| Best Sellers Rank | #656,923 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #819 in Political Ideologies #1,797 in Political Freedom & Security (Books) #14,955 in Biographies & Autobiographies (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 2,249 Reviews |
M**N
Worst monotonous and sleepy book
Don't buy this book. Very boring I discontinued reading this book after few chapters. There is no storyline involving the deep struggle of North Korean people but only usa usa usa. Very boring. A girl with seven names by hyenseo Lee is much more serious and logically written on struggles and how she escaped. This book is irritating. Wasted my money. Amazon return me my money because of ur fake description i was lured to purchase it. Please give a honest description Amazon. Boring irritating book
S**R
Huge respect for this writer. Would recommend for all students.
I have read that Yeonmi Park is criticised for her narratives some suggesting that she is exaggerating. Even if a quarter were only true I would still admire her fortitude, intelligence, perspective and generosity in telling her story, putting her head above the parapet to help her fellow North Koreans. She loves America and is vocal in her praise of its freedoms and what the country has given to her so don't be put off when I say that In this book she takes no prisoners. She exposes the hypocrisy of the elites whom she has met and who have subsequently disappointed her because of their dependence on China. She writes of her experience at Columbia University, doing a cultural module where she is told to see things in a particular way triggering memories from the Kim past and the subsequent prevailing 'group think' that pervades , spilling into ordinary peoples behaviour on the street. An experience which inspired her to write this book. I had read her autobiography so know the point from where she comes. The enormity of her life experience both in North Korea and in China. Her insights hit hard. It is much more concisely written than her first book and I would recommend this as a book that all young people should read. Ms Park was only 29 when she wrote this book and I wish her and her son all the best for the future. She survived and could lead a life of quiet safety but she has chosen to shout. Respect.
F**D
Incredible perspective.
Incredible book providing perspective from someone who has lived through the nightmares of socialism and communism, been sex-trafficked, and defeated all odds to carve out success in our society. Provides a clear warning to those life-long liberal arts students and career public servants who embrace socialist policies.
R**R
Powerful, purposeful insight into 'woke elitist' American culture - MUST READ
UPDATE: Thank you all for the support! Following Yeonmi’s lead, I’ve began to get involved at the grassroots level campaigning for Kennedy 2024 and have experienced VERY ENCOURAGING results. Personal responsibility and ownership is the Way to restoring American freedom, democracy, and unity. Park's second volume serves as a courageous, cautionary and uniquely crafted perspective into contemporary American culture. Recruiting her experiences in the tyrannical regimes of North Korea and China, as well as her experience at Columbia and as an acclimating American citizen, she carefully and clearly details the growing connections between the current sociopolitical climate in America and the fundamental idealogical narratives and practicalities of circumstance that lead to tyranny. Park makes several powerful arguments and observations that help make an objective case for the why the American elite is motivated, by the self-interest of their position, to continue the propagation of woke ideology—and why everyday Americans are afraid to take action, partly because most of them are unable to truly appreciate the marvel of their own liberties (having never been denied them or exposed to real life circumstances without them), and partly because of a lack of leadership, guidance, and planning on this front. I found her increasingly articulate reflections on the circumstances that make socialist tyranny possible particularly eye-opening and intrinsically persuasive. Park discusses how the lack of linguistic representation for concepts such as 'starvation', 'depression', and 'freedom' in the North Korean dialect provides the state increased abilities to police thought, and as consequence deter revolution and resistance by stripping individuals of the necessary cognitive, communicative, and linguistic means to organize such. There's much to talk about, many similar arguments to this that outline the practicalities of the current situation—attempting to elucidate, from Park's perspective, why society is where it is at today and what we can do about it. This, coupled alongside interesting anecdotes, leads to a mentally stimulating, educating, and thoughtful read that I believe ultimately made me a better person, or at least a less ignorant one. Here's a quote that struck me hard: "At the end of the day, this is the object of cancel culture in America: to deprive people of the right or ability to express thoughts that run counter to official narratives, so that eventually, they won't even know how. Threaten people enough with the destruction of their reputations and livelihoods if they criticize the wrong thing, and eventually they won't even know how to criticize it." I would also like to mention that there was a moment reading this book where I can say that for the first time in my life, I genuinely felt proud to be an American—and in the best way possible, not founded on grandiosity or false bravado but a real, solid sense of appreciation, perspective, gratitude and honor. It was a strange feeling, one that I suppose I wasn't supposed to feel, but it left me with a resolve to remember the words in this book and put my faith into them as True. To provide some context, I am an Ivy League student in the US and am well aware of the current woke idealogical narrative. I think Park's second installment is so crucial because it has given me the perspective to see the real value in what American stands for, and to therefore have the wisdom to understand how precious and fragile freedom actually is, and to be willing to speak my mind and do my part no matters the consequences. I am now embodying this knowledge in my own life and my own decisions, and am frequently reminded of Nietzsche's comment "How much truth can a spirit bear, how much truth can a spirit dare? That became more and more for me the real measure of value" as I begin to speak my mind, say what I think. I now see that the consequences of not doing so are simply too great. Park ends optimistically describing what we, everyday Americans, can do. Park advocates for personal responsibility, and outlines how by attending to the democratic process, by voting in schoolboard meetings, building local communities, engaging meaningfully with your family, limiting social media usage, among other such things, we can all do our part, carry our weight, and produce real change. In essence, instead of looking towards DC to fix our problems, abdicating our personal power, we should look to ourselves. My only critique of this deeply purposeful book is that some of the passages appeared to be repeated throughout the book. However, in consideration of the magnitude and importance of the piece of a whole, I would consider this to be a minor practical flaw. I give this book five stars and would recommend it to anyone, really.
P**H
Un must have !
Incroyablement inspirant tout simplement. Ce livre nous fait vraiment relativiser.
I**N
A beacon of hope for North Korea
I have the highest admiration for this courageous young lady. She is a true beacon of hope for the liberation of the North Korean People. I sincerely hope she succeeds further.
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