Interrogator / Min Jin Lee
Setting the scene
Korean-American author and journalist Min Jin Lee shot to worldwide fame after the publication of her best-selling 2017 novel Pachinko, which follows four different generations of a South Korean family in Japan. Set against the backdrop of colonisation and warfare, the book deftly explores the tense historical relationship between the two countries and has been adapted into an eight-part series by Apple TV, which is due to premiere on 25 March. Here, Min tells us about her affinity for period dramas, some cultural obsessions and how she gets her caffeine fix.
Coffee, tea or something pressed in the morning?
I always have two mugs of black coffee.
A favourite bookshop?
It usually depends on where I am in New York but The Corner Bookstore, Books Are Magic, Greenlight, McNally Jackson, Book Culture and Shakespeare & Co are a few of my favourites.
And what’s your movie genre of choice?
Period dramas (yes, seriously).
What’s the best thing you’ve watched on TV recently?
Recently, it has been Succession and Squid Game.
Magazines for your weekend sofa-side stack?
The New Yorker, The Economist and Monocle. My husband and I have been Monocle subscribers for more than a decade. We own several totes.
What have you been working on lately?
My third novel, American Hagwon.
Favourite film?
Boyhood, Parasite and Il Postino.
Sofa or cinema for the evening?
Honestly, I prefer the cinema.
Do you still watch the nightly news? Do you have a favourite newsreader?
PBS News Hour and CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360. I love Jeffrey Brown and Anderson Cooper.
What music do you listen to?
Hip-hop, R&B, pop and jazz. Also, a fair bit of opera and classical music. My mother was a piano teacher so I grew up listening to Chopin, Debussy, Bach, Beethoven and Mozart.
Do you hum in the shower?
Never.
Who’s your cultural obsession?
Cynthia Erivo, Yoshitomo Nara, Kim Tschang-yeul, Mickalene Thomas and George Eliot.
What are your favourite podcasts?
Pivot and Sway because of Kara Swisher, The Ezra Klein Show, Unlocking Us with Brené Brown, Freakonomics, Scriptnotes and TV’s Top 5.
What’s on the airwaves before drifting off?
Total silence, please. I need to wear earplugs and a sleeping mask to get a proper night’s rest.