Reviewed by: BigAl
Genre: Memoir/Travel
Approximate word count: 20-25,000 words
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Author:
“Alex
Clermont is a writer born and raised in New York City. He has a BA in English
creative writing from Hunter College and has been an English teacher for the
past several years.
Alex has
been a contributing writer to Beyond Race Magazine, covering and interviewing
independent artists and musicians. He was also the managing editor of Plateau,
a quarterly print magazine that focused on independent musicians.”
For more,
visit Clermont’s website.
Description:
“Imagine
leaving behind everybody and everything familiar to live in a foreign country
where you don't speak the language and don't know a soul. Worse yet, you look
different from everybody there. People find your cultural norms insulting, and
you can't get a date to save your life.
Imagine you
wrote a book about your time there...
Eating Kimchi and Nodding Politely is a collection of snapshots that
cover the two years that Alex Clermont lived in the country of South Korea as
an English teacher. Scribed with a flair for humor, emotion, character and
depth, these introspective narratives do more than act as a travel guide. They
are creatively written windows into the life of someone discovering new things
about himself, the world, and the people who he shares it with-all while
stuffing his mouth with kimchi.”
Appraisal:
A few lines
from the introduction of Eating Kimchi …
jumped out at me as getting to the heart of what the book is about. He
described these pieces as “creative non-fiction based on the real things that
were happening to me in my new, unusual, home” about “emotions and situations
that are universal. Things like death, love, sex, friendship, and food are not
confined to one country.”
Although a
collection of essays, from very short to relatively long, that each stand alone
and were not designed to have an overarching theme, they still form a coherent
whole. Clermont didn’t arrange the essays in chronological order, but instead
ordered them in a way that I thought made the flow better. Many wouldn’t
consider this a travel book, yet it has many of the qualities that some travel
books have: a foreign locale with insights contrasting the local culture to the
author’s own, and an attempt by the author to better understand himself based
on his reactions to his new environment. However, the author is more open and
forthcoming about his personal struggles and how they relate to his experiences
than the typical travel book, taking Eating
Kimchi … more into the ground usually trod in a memoir. An excellent read,
both for its insights into life in Korea and how it shines a light on the human
condition in general.
FYI:
A small
amount of adult language.
Format/Typo Issues:
No
significant errors.
Rating: **** Four stars
2 comments:
Your review is inviting. The situation of being in a foreign land and needing to find a way to fit in reminds me of my year in Vietnam as an advisor. Talk about being different in appearance to all of those around you - it had echos of Gullivers Travels operating at times.
Hey Larry. Glad you found this review inviting. Hopefully you'll be satisfied with the book too!
My time in South Korea was probably just as jarring as your time in Vietnam. Some of life's experiences don't need translations. :)
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