695 reviews for:

The Plotters

Un-su Kim

3.56 AVERAGE


Behind every assassination, there is an anonymous mastermind--a plotter--working in the shadows. Plotters quietly dictate the moves of the city's most dangerous criminals, but their existence is little more than legend. Just who are the plotters? And more important, what do they want?

The Plotters written by Un-su Kim tells the story of Reseng, an assassin in Korea, who was raised by Old Raccoon who teaches him to become an assassin. When Reseng doesn’t follow an assassination exactly the way his plotter told him too he finds himself in trouble and possibly on a hit list. When he meets up with three ladies, a convenience store clerk, her wheelchair bound sister, and a cross-eyed librarian things get really interesting.

This book was beautifully written. The descriptions felt poetic even the violent parts however, this really is not the type of book I would normally read so I had a hard time getting into it. It wasn’t until about halfway through when the ladies were introduced that I got into it. I did root for Reseng the entire time and felt for him even though he is an assassin. 3.5 out of 5 stars for me.

Thank you NetGalley and Doubleday Books for an ARC in exchange for my honest review.

As usual, I was interested in the back stories of not the main character, Reseng the assassin, but the cross eyed librarian and the two sisters. Underestimated females who are the true power brokers, hell yeah! The plot didn't make much sense, nor did the ending other than for cinematic heroic effect which I wasn't buying. When Reseng ruminated about the future he could have had with factory girl, I just rolled my eyes. I really don't think killing people for a living is the only choice he had, same goes for the Barber. The killing of the dog at the start sets the stage for brutal senseless violence to follow.
Wow, the assassin reads literary books and their assassination HQ is called The Library. Is that an attempt to endear and humanize these murderers?

Another interesting topic that I wish the author had gone into more detail is the role of gangs, assassinations and corruption in South Korean politics. It's hinted at but would have been fascinating if conjecture was spelled out. Is the chair at the top empty, endlessly spinning?

isisvda's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH

dnf

durrenmatt's review

4.0

I had great fun with this 'hard-boiled Korean Noir' novel which is much more than a simple thriller. The hero of the novel, Reseng, is a simple hitman who has been killing all his life without knowing for who or for what. It is the mysterious Plotters that give his boss their assignments and Reseng has no idea who they are or why they kill. However, the old 'meat market' is changing and so is Reseng, especially when he finds a bomb in his toilet.

There is excellent writing (original, humourous, dark and ironic), interesting symbolism and crazy characters. Learning about Korea's criminal underworld makes it extra interesting.
medium-paced
biatdias's profile picture

biatdias's review

3.0
dark mysterious reflective slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

Seit Raeseng als Säugling von Old Raccoon aufgezogen wurde, dem Besitzer und Anführer der "Library of Dogs" ist sein Leben vorbestimmt. Und so steigt er mit 17 Jahren quasi ins Familiengeschäft ein: als Auftragskiller erledigt er die Drecksarbeit für die Strippenzieher im Hintergrund, die so genannten Plotter. Doch als Raeseng schließlich eines Tages von den Vorgaben für einen seiner Aufträge abweicht, gerät er selbst ins Fadenkreuz und auf die Abschussliste der Plotter.

Es ist eine schonungslose Geschichte, die der Koreaner Un-Su Kim uns hier präsentiert. An vielen Stellen merkt man ihr den asiatischen Stil deutlich an und die Alltagsszene lesen sich dann wie aus der Feder von Haruki Murakami. Wenn dann jedoch Finger durch die Luft fliegen oder über die korrekte und spurlose Zerstörung menschlicher Überreste gefachsimpelt wird, ist nur zu klar, dass es sich hier eben nicht um ein Werk des japanischen Bestsellerautors handelt, sondern um einen knallharten koreanischen Thriller.

Der Leser begleitet Raeseng durch einen Großteil seines Lebens, erfährt von seiner einsamen Kindheit ohne Liebe in der Bibliothek Old Raccoons, von seinen kläglichen Versuchen, einen anderen Beruf zu wählen und von seiner Loyalität zu der einzigen Familie, die er jemals hatte. In Hanja, der so etwas wie sein älterer Bruder ist, hat er den perfekten Gegenspieler und nur einer von beiden kann am Ende lebend aus allem herauskommen.

"Die Plotter" ist ein Thriller mit einem interessanten Thema, der den Auftragskiller Raeseng für uns greifbar macht. Man muss sich jedoch damit abfinden, dass uns nur ein Ausschnitt aus einem großen Ganzen präsentiert wird, nur eine Episode in einem viel größeren Schauspiel. Das ist dem Autor gut gelungen, der nüchterne Sprachstil unterstreicht die Handlung noch mehr. Dennoch hätten dem Roman in manchen Szenen ein paar Zeilen mehr gut getan, vieles bleibt so einfach unbefriedigend und unabgeschlossen.

I feel like I would've enjoyed this a lot more had I been in a different mood and we were in different circumstances, but I still think it was a good book tbh
dark mysterious medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No

First book by a Korean author. fast paced and does not get boring.