North Korean Prison Camps

· Radio Free Asia
4.2
26 reviews
eBook
14
Pages
Eligible

About this eBook

 North Korean prison camps incarcerate up to three generations of families of people who are accused of opposing the government. The inmates are completely cut off from North Korean society, which in turn knows little about the camps.

Ratings and reviews

4.2
26 reviews
Tom Kevlar
20 July 2020
Giving this book 5 stars means that I loved it which I did not. Don't get me wrong. It's a really good and excruciatingly detailed book on the situation and it took me many nights to finish the 58 pages of this book due to how much of a scar this left on my mental state. But the very least we as humans beings can do is hear the stories of those who live such miserable, painful and torturous lives. It hurts me so much that it is taking so long for things to change. It angers me that so many ignore the cries.
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Paul Cresswell
28 February 2019
If the camps are so 'secret', how does the author (no doubt a pseudonym of a ghostwriter for the south Korean intelligence agency) know about them?
1 person found this review helpful
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Michael Nielsen
10 September 2018
Very intriguing and alarming in its own way. Could be considered a rated R book because of how explicit the refugees are. But it needs to be known.
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