The Pachinko Parlour Quotes

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The Pachinko Parlour The Pachinko Parlour by Elisa Shua Dusapin
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The Pachinko Parlour Quotes Showing 1-5 of 5
“I like it when it’s foggy. When you can’t see into the distance. When there’s no horizon. It gives me a feeling of having time. That it’s all right not to see, not to be aware of what’s in my path.”
Elisa Shua Dusapin, The Pachinko Parlour
“When Korea was divided, we were still nationals of a unified Korea. It was called Choson. At separation, the Japanese government gave us permission to keep our Korean identity, but we had to choose between North and South. Many people chose the North, because of their family or because they considered the North more in line with our country’s traditions. There was no way of knowing how things would turn out. Your grandmother and I chose the South because we were from Seoul. That was the only reason. We knew nothing about any of the rest of it. Political questions meant nothing to us, the Cold War, Russia, the United States. Koreans who live in Japan have never known North and South Korea. We are all people of Choson. People from a country that no longer exists.”
Elisa Shua Dusapin, The Pachinko Parlour
tags: korea
“They made it illegal to speak Korean. You could be sentenced to death for speaking it. And do you know what your grandmother’s mother did to avoid being subjected to speaking Japanese at school? She sliced off part of her own tongue.”
Elisa Shua Dusapin, The Pachinko Parlour
“Looking down, all you can see are low-rise buildings, no higher than the lampposts, lights coming on in the windows. Signposts. No cars. Everything seems to float, like jellyfish in the sky.”
Elisa Shua Dusapin, The Pachinko Parlour
“I look out of the window. Mount Fuji is shrouded in darkness now. The city has become no more than a leaden mass, lifeless. Lines are starting to blur inside the apartment too. I feel as though I can hardly move. Without the view from the window, it would be unbearable. You'd suffocate”
Elisa Shua Dusapin, The Pachinko Parlour