Review by Booklist Review
Where will libraries shelve this engaging memoir by former Washington Post reporter Ahrens? Like many contemporary memoirs, it is not all about the author. When finished with it, readers will remember as much or more about Korean history and culture and about management of Hyundai Motors as about Ahrens and his family. As a business reporter turned public relations exec for Hyundai, Ahrens adds a bit of drama to facts and figures in his account of the designing and marketing of Hyundai's top-selling cars. He also lightheartedly chronicles his mishaps as a lone American trying to work in a Korean corporation and intimately describes the challenges of living in the city of Seoul, where a North Korean attack is always only minutes away. So, where to shelve? Perhaps put this book with other descriptions of South Korea or in the business section. Seoul Man is a great read for business readers and for Americans-abroad memoir fans.--Roche, Rick Copyright 2016 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Civilizations clash and learn from each other when an American joins a South Korean company in this fish-out-of-water memoir. Former Washington Post reporter Ahrens went to Seoul to become a PR executive for auto-maker Hyundai and found a nation of odd contrasts: a gleaming, futuristic democracy steeped in old-fashioned Confucian hierarchy; selfless teamwork paired with desperate competition for status; ubiquitous plastic surgery to attain a monotonous standard of beauty; densely crowded cities where people make few friends; and buttoned-down conformity that somehow works itself out in raucous drinking parties. Despite his baffled amusement at Korean idiosyncrasies, Ahrens finds the local ethos rubbing off as he tries to reconcile his lifelong individualism with his commitments as a new husband and father. Along the way, he explores Hyundai's contrasting effort to shed its economy-car image and make its brand feel more upscale, and specifically more German, by building precision-engineered luxury models. Ahrens's blend of personal memoir, reportage, and business history doesn't always come together but the book is engagingly written and full of funny, intriguing probes into the quirks he discovers in his surroundings and himself. This is a nuanced look at a nation where an image of Western modernity is reflected and illuminated by an off-kilter mirror. Agent: Howard Yoon, Ross Yoon Agency. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Booklist Review
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review