Y/N cover art

Y/N

A Novel

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Y/N

Written by: Esther Yi
Narrated by: Greta Jung
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About this listen

Surreal, hilarious, and shrewdly poignant—a novel about a Korean American woman living in Berlin whose obsession with a K-pop idol sends her to Seoul on a journey of literary self-destruction.

It’s as if her life only began once Moon appeared in it. The desultory copywriting work, the boyfriend, and the want of anything not-Moon quickly fall away when she beholds the idol in concert, where Moon dances as if his movements are creating their own gravitational field; on live streams, as fans from around the world comment in dozens of languages; even on skincare products endorsed by the wildly popular Korean boy band, of which Moon is the youngest, most luminous member. Seized by ineffable desire, our unnamed narrator begins writing Y/N fanfic—in which you, the audience, insert [Your/Name] and play out an intimate relationship with the unattainable star.

Then Moon suddenly retires, vanishing from the public eye. She stumbles into total disorientation. As Y/N flies from Berlin to Seoul to be with Moon, our narrator, too, journeys in search of the object of her love. In Korea, an escalating series of mistranslations and misidentifications land her at the headquarters of the Kafkaesque entertainment company that manages the boyband until, at a secret location, together with Moon at last, art and real life approach their final convergence.

From a conspicuous new talent comes Y/N, a provocative literary debut about the universal longing for transcendence and the tragic struggle to assert one’s singular story amidst the amnesiac effects of globalization. Crackling with the intellectual sensitivity of Elif Batuman and the sinewy absurdism of Thomas Pynchon, Esther Yi’s prose unsettles the boundary between high and mass art, exploding our expectations of a novel about “identity” and offering in its place a sui generis picture of the loneliness that afflicts modern life.

©2023 Esther Yi (P)2023 Spotify Audiobooks
Genre Fiction Literature & Fiction Fiction Witty Funny
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best book i've read in a long long long time

a masterpiece which few will truly understand. horrific, raw and uncomfortable, this one hits a little too close to home.

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Wow is this bad

This is, honest to god, the single most unreadable book imaginable. I read at least a book a week, and it is truly rare for me to abandon a novel, but I got three chapters in and had to quit. This is the kind of overwrought, underdeveloped novel whose entire premise is sounding real smart about something it ostensibly has something to “say” about the modern human experience, but actually should probably just have been a tweet. The narrator reads like she just took a hit of expired ketamine and is trying to talk to you from the K-hole. I cannot get over how much I hated this.

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