The Fetishist is a novel by Katherine Min, published in 2024. The introduction was written by Cathy Park Hong, a poet.[1]
It is Min's second, and final, novel.[2]
Min was a Korean American.[3]
The author used Lolita as inspiration.[4]
The novelist wrote the novel until 2014, when a diagnosis of breast cancer caused her to decide to stop creating fiction. In 2019, the author died.[1] The author did not leave a document stating what should be done with the writing.[5]
Kayla Min Andrews,[2] the author's daughter, obtained a computer that had a copy of the work, and this was used to have the book published.[1] Lauren LeBlanc of the Los Angeles Times wrote "For an ostensibly unfinished manuscript, it was remarkably polished."[2] This version had author's notes. The file with the copy had been worked on last before Min learned she had cancer.[2]
The main characters are Alma Soon Ja Lee, a Korean American musician; Daniel Karmody, an Irish American musician; and Kyoko Tokugawa, a Japanese American woman.[4]
Alma, from California, has multiple sclerosis,[6] which is certain to kill her.[7] Alma previously played the cello.[6] Alma and Daniel were in a relationship, but this relationship failed,[4] because Daniel cheated on her with Emi Tokugawa, Kyoko's mother.[1] Daniel then went on to have affairs with other Asian American women. The novel describes Daniel as having a sexual fetish for Asian American women, among them Emi Tokugawa,[4] who had committed suicide due to Daniel giving her rejection.[2] Daniel, a resident of Baltimore, Maryland, played the string quartet and lead a musical group called "Thanatos."[6] 23-year-old Kyoko,[4] a resident of Baltmore, draws comics in a manga style,[6] and does singing work for a band with a punk rock theme.[7]
Kyoko has a grudge against Daniel and wishes to kill him.[4] Kyoko kidnaps Daniel,[2] and places him in the basement of her residence. Ultimately Daniel realizes that he had done wrong actions in the past and decides to atone for them.[6]
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People ranked the novel as one of the "Best Books To Read in January 2024", 14/21.[8] It cited Marion Winik of the Seattle Times, who described the novel as "a delightful, fantastic novel".[1]
Sophia Nguyen of the Washington Post described the work as "ahead of its time".[5] Lauren Leblanc of the Los Angeles Times also described the book as such.[2]
Publishers Weekly stated that "the technicolor, Tarantino-esque crime plot can be great fun."[6] The PW review stated that The Fetishist "initially sets out to restore a sense of humanity to" Daniel's victims, and that how Daniel atones and how the novel focuses on that "is a curious and somewhat frustrating" development.[6]