Review: The Dallergut Dream Department Store

With The Dallergut Dream Department Store, Miye Lee explores the nature and power of dreams, the possibilities created by choosing them, and human nature itself. Whimsical and sweet, this debut novel translated from Korean by Sandy Joosun Lee will leave any reader musing and looking forward to a good night's rest.

"For centuries, Penny's hometown has been famous for its sleep products. Now it has evolved into a metropolis.... The locals, including Penny, who grew up here, are used to seeing outsiders roaming around in sleepwear." Penny is terribly excited to interview at the Dallergut Dream Department Store, the crown jewel in a town devoted to sleepers' needs. She has studied the mythology and history, but meeting Dallergut himself is intimidating. However, he turns out to be nothing but nice, forgiving her learner's errors and prioritizing the sale of the right dream to the right customer, even over profits. Penny fangirls over the greatest dreammakers, whom she gets to meet in her new job: Nicholas, who specializes in seasonal dreams; Babynap Rockabye, who creates conception dreams; Maxim, who does surprising work in a dark back-alley studio; and Bancho, who cares for animals.

Penny has so much to learn, from bank deposits to the Eyelid Scale, not to mention the power of precognitive dreams. Purchased dreams are paid for only after they have had an effect on the sleeper, and payments come in the form of emotions experienced, so no one pays in advance or for a dud. Dreammakers can get fabulously rich and famous, but their best reward is helping people (or animals). Nap dreams differ importantly from longer ones. "Bad" dreams may serve a purpose, too. And there is, perhaps unsurprisingly, an important link between dreams, in the sense of aspirations and ambitions, and dreams as in the images and sensations that visit sleepers.

Penny is an innocent, wide-eyed disciple of Dallergut and his good works, as well as the celebrity dreammakers. Through her perspective and her refreshing tone, readers encounter an appealing, absorbing, imaginative world with rules for who designs experiences for whom. In her translator's note, Sandy Joosun Lee calls The Dallergut Dream Department Store "a story that is both fun and deep... unpretentious yet full of life," and keeps Penny's observations disarmingly enthusiastic and earnest. The pleasing tale, while simple on its surface, asks questions about self-determination and the mysterious power of nighttime imaginings to impact one's daily, "real" life. With a Calm Cookie or a Deep Sleep Candy, or just the right dream, all things are possible in Lee's captivating world. --Julia Kastner, librarian and blogger at pagesofjulia

Shelf Talker: Sleepers shop for dreams at a very special department store, where dreams may come true not only for customers but for employees as well.

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