North Korea regularly dominates the headlines, but rarely do outsiders hear the perspective of its people. Ask a North Korean is a welcome remedy. Fascinating and insightful. -Bryan Harris, Financial Times correspondent in Seoul
Ask A North Korean gives valuable insight into how former North Koreans see themselves, their changing country and its place in the world. -Andray Abrahamian, Chosun Exchange
With North Korea once more in the news, this book will enable readers to empathize with a people often forgotten as a result of the bellicosity of their government. -Publishers Weekly
Given current headlines, historical and sociopolitical interest, and even schadenfreude-laden curiosity, this is a valuable book ... these voices deserve attention, compassion, and respect. -Booklist
The range of subjects covered in Ask a North Korean is fascinating, allowing the reader to understand citizens of this shielded country. Simultaneously, the essays are unnerving, given conflicted views of the press and freedom of speech around the world, not just in North Korea. It's a stark reminder of how valuable these rights are and how easy it is to take them for granted. - Shelf Awareness
In his new book, Ask a North Korean, Daniel Tudor-a former Economist journalist and current Korean beer entrepreneur- wants people to understand the true lives of everyday North Koreans. Using translated essays written by defectors, the book covers topics from politics to pornography. - The Boston Globe
Among other things, we learn what children's books are popular ('Daddy Long Legs' and 'Cinderella'), what jobs are sought after (chauffeuring) and how political discussions among family members are conducted. We hear that North Koreans are capitalistic and that single men seek women with cell phones and motorbikes. These are the kind of details that make the book credible and interesting ... Ask a North Korean is testimony that ordinary North Koreans have more in common with the rest of us than many would lead you to believe. - The Japan Times
North Korea is such an unlikely country that it might be a parallel dimension, and would even be faintly comical if nuclear weapons were not in the mix. The recent thaw in relations has shed some light on the power structures, but little is known about how ordinary people lead their lives. Daniel Tudor's remarkable book is a start on changing that. It is based on a weekly column, Ask A North Korean, published by an American online newspaper based in Seoul. The column invites readers to put questions to North Korean defectors, and it is hugely popular in South Korea. The book is a series of in-depth interviews with four defectors, covering everything from politics to fashion. - The Australian