
What a nice attitude
Description
Book Introduction
“Never treat people as a means to an end…” For 15 years, KBS's 'Documentary 3 Days' and tvN's 'You Quiz on the Block' The author, who has worked as a documentary director, shares life lessons from countless people. This book is a compilation of the meaning of life and solid attitudes toward life that the author, who worked as a documentary director for KBS's 'Documentary 3 Days' and tvN's 'You Quiz on the Block', learned from countless people he met on the street. The author has traveled the world with a camera for over 15 years, meeting countless people on the streets, from homeless people to presidents. And by listening to their honest stories, I have found answers to life and gained warm comfort and wisdom from them. Thanks to this, the author was able to realize how narrow a world he had been living in, trapped in countless misunderstandings and prejudices, and says that he truly learned a great deal by deeply observing the lives of various people in the wide world. Among them, I have selected and included in this book the stories I want to share with people who want to live a life without regrets. What kind of attitude should I have toward life to live a solid life? What is the force that ultimately makes us live? What is the minimum courtesy I should have toward myself, others, and my life? How do I want to age in the future? “If you ever feel lost, if you hate yourself so much that you can’t stand it, or if you feel lonely and need comfort but have nowhere to turn, I hope that reading any of the lives introduced in this book will give you strength. “Then I think I could ask for nothing more.” |
- You can preview some of the book's contents.
Preview
index
Prologue: Why I want to meet more people in the future
Chapter 1 Learning from the countless people I've met on the road over the past 15 years
Never treat people as a means to an end.
A word from someone who was unjustly imprisoned for 21 years.
Why couldn't you tell me that?
Everyone becomes a father like that
Unforgettable comfort from a stranger
A moment when I was really embarrassed
There are many more kind people in the world.
The Meaning of Death as Taught to Children
Chapter 2 When a person comes, his life comes.
The cruelest thing a person can do to another person
When a person comes, his life comes.
“Sister, I think this is our destiny!”
About the name Mom
A phrase that comes to mind when I walk alone
It could be my misunderstanding.
A grandfather's calm confession at the memorial park
Things to do before it's too late
Chapter 3 A Really Good Attitude to Life
If you know how to offer an umbrella to someone walking alone in the rain,
Don't be too discouraged, don't be too proud
Why the son told his father not to feel sorry
If it's cool, it's not easy, and if it's easy, it's not cool.
What Hospice Patients Taught Me
An attitude of not sympathizing with others
There is no such thing as trivial in the world.
One thing to keep in mind to live with dignity
Chapter 4: Still, We Need Comfort
If you ask me why I am comforting you
A single expression of gratitude is enough.
On the joys and sorrows of work
It may seem like nothing, but it helps
A single word: “We will pray for you for the rest of your life.”
Why Grandma Gives You Coffee Just Before You Leave for the Doctor
Nothing is taken for granted
The force that ultimately makes us live
Chapter 5: Am I really living well?
Questions he would like to ask his deceased mother
Things I felt while recording the life and death of the president
If there's just one person who believes in me
And yet, the reason they do their best
Even if I hear people call me a 'weird' my whole life
If the ladder you're climbing collapses, just find another one.
To those who are enduring the winter of life
Wandering is proof that you are trying.
Chapter 6 Courtesy to Myself, Courtesy to Others
An unexpected gift from broadcaster Yoo Jae-suk
Why are you only worried about the fetus and not about the pregnant woman?
The children who helped me realize the meaning of friendship
No one has the right to tell you to prove your misfortune.
I didn't try to live like a mother, I just lived like myself.
How to avoid being swayed by rude people
The meaning behind the final greeting, “Don’t come back.”
The person I need to cherish most in the world is myself.
Chapter 7 If only I could grow old like this
The one thing I regret most in my life
I wish I could say 'thank you' too
The Secret to Happiness Learned from the Grandmothers of Yonghodo
Things I learned while watching the final moments of the monk Beopjeong
Love is being together but keeping your distance
When you feel like tomorrow never comes
No matter what anyone says, I'll be myself
Let's talk then
Chapter 1 Learning from the countless people I've met on the road over the past 15 years
Never treat people as a means to an end.
A word from someone who was unjustly imprisoned for 21 years.
Why couldn't you tell me that?
Everyone becomes a father like that
Unforgettable comfort from a stranger
A moment when I was really embarrassed
There are many more kind people in the world.
The Meaning of Death as Taught to Children
Chapter 2 When a person comes, his life comes.
The cruelest thing a person can do to another person
When a person comes, his life comes.
“Sister, I think this is our destiny!”
About the name Mom
A phrase that comes to mind when I walk alone
It could be my misunderstanding.
A grandfather's calm confession at the memorial park
Things to do before it's too late
Chapter 3 A Really Good Attitude to Life
If you know how to offer an umbrella to someone walking alone in the rain,
Don't be too discouraged, don't be too proud
Why the son told his father not to feel sorry
If it's cool, it's not easy, and if it's easy, it's not cool.
What Hospice Patients Taught Me
An attitude of not sympathizing with others
There is no such thing as trivial in the world.
One thing to keep in mind to live with dignity
Chapter 4: Still, We Need Comfort
If you ask me why I am comforting you
A single expression of gratitude is enough.
On the joys and sorrows of work
It may seem like nothing, but it helps
A single word: “We will pray for you for the rest of your life.”
Why Grandma Gives You Coffee Just Before You Leave for the Doctor
Nothing is taken for granted
The force that ultimately makes us live
Chapter 5: Am I really living well?
Questions he would like to ask his deceased mother
Things I felt while recording the life and death of the president
If there's just one person who believes in me
And yet, the reason they do their best
Even if I hear people call me a 'weird' my whole life
If the ladder you're climbing collapses, just find another one.
To those who are enduring the winter of life
Wandering is proof that you are trying.
Chapter 6 Courtesy to Myself, Courtesy to Others
An unexpected gift from broadcaster Yoo Jae-suk
Why are you only worried about the fetus and not about the pregnant woman?
The children who helped me realize the meaning of friendship
No one has the right to tell you to prove your misfortune.
I didn't try to live like a mother, I just lived like myself.
How to avoid being swayed by rude people
The meaning behind the final greeting, “Don’t come back.”
The person I need to cherish most in the world is myself.
Chapter 7 If only I could grow old like this
The one thing I regret most in my life
I wish I could say 'thank you' too
The Secret to Happiness Learned from the Grandmothers of Yonghodo
Things I learned while watching the final moments of the monk Beopjeong
Love is being together but keeping your distance
When you feel like tomorrow never comes
No matter what anyone says, I'll be myself
Let's talk then
Detailed image

Into the book
After the broadcast, viewers poured in messages of support for cancer patients.
That's when I learned.
That you can make a good show while being considerate of people, without exploiting or harassing them, to get the job done well.
So, even if you met someone through work, you should not treat them as a means to an end in your desire to do a good job.
We must not forget that work is ultimately done by people.
This is why we must put people before work.
---From “Never treat people as a means to an end”
“What does death mean to you?”
“I have done everything in this world.
“I did everything I had to do.”
“Did Grandpa do his ‘part’ and leave?”
“Yes, you have done enough.”
Actually, I asked the question without much expectation, but when I heard the child's answer, tears welled up in my eyes.
It was just one sentence, but it seemed to clearly capture the meaning of life.
When I die, will I be able to leave having done my part?
Can someone please tell me that I have done my part and am gone?
---From "The Meaning of Death Learned from Children"
Every time I meet people while reporting, I think of the saying, “It’s actually a huge thing when people come.”
Until I met her on the streets of Myeongdong, I had no idea that such a history might be hidden in a woman selling odds and ends at a small stall.
So how amazing and wonderful is fate?
So, every time I meet someone, I wonder about their past, present, and future.
I wonder what kind of incredible history he will bring to surprise me this time.
So I try not to forget that when someone walks towards me, his whole life comes to him.
- From “When a person comes, his life comes”
He said that the thought suddenly occurred to him while he was playing a transgender role in the film 'Jane the Virgin.'
It may be a wrong prejudice to carelessly feel pity for someone or look at them in that way without having experienced their life.
What the other person wants is not a hasty look of sympathy, but a gaze without any prejudice.
---From "The Attitude of Not Pitying Others"
Even when the elderly are lonely, they don't say they are lonely.
But he said there are times when he feels how lonely the elderly are.
“When we visit the elderly, they don’t offer us coffee at first.
“Please give me a cup of coffee when I am about to stand up after the treatment.”
That is, he only serves coffee right before he leaves, hoping that he will stay a little longer.
Then we can hang out together a little longer while you finish your coffee.
He pretends not to know and sits down, drinking the coffee the old man gave him and chatting away.
---From "'Why Grandma Gives Coffee Just Before She Leaves for the Doctor'"
As we live, there comes a time when we can do nothing but pray.
At times like that, I want to scream, “Why is this happening to me?” and “What did I do wrong to deserve this pain?”
Every time that happens, I think of Sorokdo.
Even now, the sound of my grandfather's organ will still resonate in Sorok Island, and along with that sound, prayers for me will also flow.
Then, the resentment towards the world will disappear.
They must gather their strength again so that their efforts to pray for the world without blaming anyone will not be in vain.
---From "''We will pray for you for the rest of your life''"
As I was living, I wondered if this was right, and whenever I wandered around trying to find an answer to what I should do to get better, I would reproach myself, asking, 'Why do I keep wavering like this?'
There are some words that comfort me at times like that.
“As long as man strives, he wanders,” was Goethe’s saying.
It seemed as if he was telling me, tired as I was, that wandering wasn't a sign of weakness, but rather proof that I was striving to live a better life.
So, while I was wandering, I decided to think like this.
'But I'm not complacent and I'm trying to get better somehow.'
---From “‘Wandering is proof that you are trying’”
We sometimes ask someone to prove their unhappiness with a nonchalant expression.
For example, to someone who has been through something unfortunate, we can casually say things like, "You can still eat after going through that?", "I see you're smiling, so I guess you've forgotten the pain of heartbreak", or "You even go out to see things like that, so I guess life is worth living now."
If you are worried about the other person, just ask, "Are you okay?"
If there is someone who demands that someone who is trying to live prove their unhappiness by saying, "If you are unhappy, you should not eat and suffer for 24 hours," then that person is wrong.
---From "No one has the right to tell you to prove your misfortune"
I have been taking art classes for several years now.
In the first class, when I received a blank sheet of paper for the first time in a long time, I was calculating in my head what colors I should use to draw and how I could achieve good results.
It was a moment when I realized how accustomed I had become to a life of being evaluated.
After I was blankly drawing for a while, the teacher came over and said.
It's okay to make mistakes, it's okay to cover them up with a different color, and if you still don't like it, you can redraw it.
---From "The person I need to cherish most in the world is myself"
And now I understand.
How much profound insight into life is hidden in their words of 'thank you'.
Sometimes, the words "thank you" are words of acceptance that only those who understand and accept that life can often betray them, who know that there is no life without hurt and pain, but who believe that if they persevere, good days will surely come.
When will I be able to say "thank you" and be positive even when life doesn't seem to be on my side?
That's when I learned.
That you can make a good show while being considerate of people, without exploiting or harassing them, to get the job done well.
So, even if you met someone through work, you should not treat them as a means to an end in your desire to do a good job.
We must not forget that work is ultimately done by people.
This is why we must put people before work.
---From “Never treat people as a means to an end”
“What does death mean to you?”
“I have done everything in this world.
“I did everything I had to do.”
“Did Grandpa do his ‘part’ and leave?”
“Yes, you have done enough.”
Actually, I asked the question without much expectation, but when I heard the child's answer, tears welled up in my eyes.
It was just one sentence, but it seemed to clearly capture the meaning of life.
When I die, will I be able to leave having done my part?
Can someone please tell me that I have done my part and am gone?
---From "The Meaning of Death Learned from Children"
Every time I meet people while reporting, I think of the saying, “It’s actually a huge thing when people come.”
Until I met her on the streets of Myeongdong, I had no idea that such a history might be hidden in a woman selling odds and ends at a small stall.
So how amazing and wonderful is fate?
So, every time I meet someone, I wonder about their past, present, and future.
I wonder what kind of incredible history he will bring to surprise me this time.
So I try not to forget that when someone walks towards me, his whole life comes to him.
- From “When a person comes, his life comes”
He said that the thought suddenly occurred to him while he was playing a transgender role in the film 'Jane the Virgin.'
It may be a wrong prejudice to carelessly feel pity for someone or look at them in that way without having experienced their life.
What the other person wants is not a hasty look of sympathy, but a gaze without any prejudice.
---From "The Attitude of Not Pitying Others"
Even when the elderly are lonely, they don't say they are lonely.
But he said there are times when he feels how lonely the elderly are.
“When we visit the elderly, they don’t offer us coffee at first.
“Please give me a cup of coffee when I am about to stand up after the treatment.”
That is, he only serves coffee right before he leaves, hoping that he will stay a little longer.
Then we can hang out together a little longer while you finish your coffee.
He pretends not to know and sits down, drinking the coffee the old man gave him and chatting away.
---From "'Why Grandma Gives Coffee Just Before She Leaves for the Doctor'"
As we live, there comes a time when we can do nothing but pray.
At times like that, I want to scream, “Why is this happening to me?” and “What did I do wrong to deserve this pain?”
Every time that happens, I think of Sorokdo.
Even now, the sound of my grandfather's organ will still resonate in Sorok Island, and along with that sound, prayers for me will also flow.
Then, the resentment towards the world will disappear.
They must gather their strength again so that their efforts to pray for the world without blaming anyone will not be in vain.
---From "''We will pray for you for the rest of your life''"
As I was living, I wondered if this was right, and whenever I wandered around trying to find an answer to what I should do to get better, I would reproach myself, asking, 'Why do I keep wavering like this?'
There are some words that comfort me at times like that.
“As long as man strives, he wanders,” was Goethe’s saying.
It seemed as if he was telling me, tired as I was, that wandering wasn't a sign of weakness, but rather proof that I was striving to live a better life.
So, while I was wandering, I decided to think like this.
'But I'm not complacent and I'm trying to get better somehow.'
---From “‘Wandering is proof that you are trying’”
We sometimes ask someone to prove their unhappiness with a nonchalant expression.
For example, to someone who has been through something unfortunate, we can casually say things like, "You can still eat after going through that?", "I see you're smiling, so I guess you've forgotten the pain of heartbreak", or "You even go out to see things like that, so I guess life is worth living now."
If you are worried about the other person, just ask, "Are you okay?"
If there is someone who demands that someone who is trying to live prove their unhappiness by saying, "If you are unhappy, you should not eat and suffer for 24 hours," then that person is wrong.
---From "No one has the right to tell you to prove your misfortune"
I have been taking art classes for several years now.
In the first class, when I received a blank sheet of paper for the first time in a long time, I was calculating in my head what colors I should use to draw and how I could achieve good results.
It was a moment when I realized how accustomed I had become to a life of being evaluated.
After I was blankly drawing for a while, the teacher came over and said.
It's okay to make mistakes, it's okay to cover them up with a different color, and if you still don't like it, you can redraw it.
---From "The person I need to cherish most in the world is myself"
And now I understand.
How much profound insight into life is hidden in their words of 'thank you'.
Sometimes, the words "thank you" are words of acceptance that only those who understand and accept that life can often betray them, who know that there is no life without hurt and pain, but who believe that if they persevere, good days will surely come.
When will I be able to say "thank you" and be positive even when life doesn't seem to be on my side?
---From "I wish I could say 'thank you' too"
Publisher's Review
“Learning Life from Philosophers on the Road”
- Strong life attitudes that will help you live a life without regrets
The author started out as a VJ (video journalist) for KBS's 'Documentary 3 Days' in 2007 and is currently working as a documentary director for tvN's 'You Quiz on the Block'.
'Documentary 3 Days' is a broadcast program that closely observes and records the situations and daily lives of people that occur in a specific space for a limited 72 hours. It began in 2007 and has been praised for its warm portrayal of our times until its grand finale in March 2022.
The author is an original member of the program and has worked as a VJ for 12 years since 2007, and has been in charge of interviews and filming for popular programs such as the Shinwol-dong junk shop episode, the National Institute of Scientific Investigation episode, the Noryangjin Gosi Village episode, the Pope Francis visit to Korea episode, the Buddhist monk Beopjeong's cremation episode, and the Dokdo Coast Guard episode.
Since 2019, he has been working as a documentary director on tvN's 'You Quiz on the Block'.
It is her job to conduct and film the interviews when additional filming of the cast is needed.
She says.
“As fate would have it, I met countless people on the road while working on documentaries, from ‘Documentary 3 Days’ to ‘You Quiz on the Block.’
They revealed to me the secrets and truths of life that I had never experienced before, and thanks to them, I began to find answers to life that I thought I would never be able to solve.
Also, thanks to the solid attitude toward life I learned from them, I was able to not give up even when I was sometimes tired and sometimes envious of others' lives, and was able to regain my center of life and move forward.
That's why I call them philosophers I met on the road.
I hope to meet more people in the future and learn from their wisdom and courage gained through vivid life stories.
“If we don’t forget the attitudes toward life we’ve learned and continue to practice them, won’t we be able to live a better life?”
“Never treat people as a means to an end.”
- Courtesy to myself, courtesy to others
In fact, when working on a documentary, there are times when you have to hold on to the railing of a ship in a typhoon and film the sailors, or when your fingers are frozen and unable to move as you want in -20 degree cold, and you have to hold the camera and film.
Going hungry is a common occurrence, and there are moments when you have to record the disaster scene up close, which is difficult to see with your eyes open because the situation has not yet been resolved.
Still, the author says that working on documentaries is the greatest luck he has ever experienced in his life.
Because I have learned so much by meeting so many people in various spaces and getting to know their lives.
Above all, it would be natural to be embarrassed if a stranger pointed a camera at the author, but most people welcomed the author wholeheartedly.
They were willing to show their space and tell their stories honestly.
In the hot weather, he cut a cool watermelon for me, saying that I had a hard time, and in the cold winter, he gave me a warm floor.
That wasn't all.
While reporting, I am bound to encounter moments that shake my emotions, and I also meet people who sincerely comfort me whenever I cannot hide my sadness.
The author says that thanks to such kind people who willingly shared their hearts without expecting anything in return, the world felt a little warmer, and he wanted to break down the walls he had built up out of fear of being hurt by others and just trust people for once.
“In my 20s, the world and people felt so difficult.
But while working on the documentary, I put myself in the shoes of people I hadn't known before and followed their perspectives, and I realized that I had more misunderstandings than I thought.
And when I learned about people's inner feelings, I felt much less angry, sad, or resentful.
And my attitude towards the world and people began to change.
Even when someone sets me up, instead of cowering in fear like before, I start to wonder if there's something wrong with them, and I start to reflect on myself first to see if I'm caught up in some kind of misunderstanding or prejudice.
And I learned that while it's important to do a good job, you also have to make sure you don't lose sight of people along the way.
When I realized that more people than I thought live without knowing the true feelings of others, it broke my heart, and I resolved to live my life expressing my true feelings to others whenever I wanted so that I wouldn't have any regrets."
“If only I could grow old like this”
-Why I want to meet more people in the future
The author has traveled the world with a camera for over 15 years, meeting countless people on the streets, from homeless people to presidents.
In particular, I was deeply impressed by meeting people who value and cherish others no matter the situation, people who never give up and have a will to live no matter how difficult it is, and people who are considerate of others and know how to look back on their day and reflect on it regardless of how much they have achieved. I found myself wanting to be like them.
Of course, whenever I got lost and wandered, I would recall the precious words they had given me and find my way back to the center of my life.
So the author says that he wants to meet more people in the future and learn a solid attitude toward life.
“While writing the book, I was reminded of the people who gave me strength at some point in my life or who showed me attitudes I wanted to emulate.
The fact that there are more kind, warm, and cool people in the world than you think.
Although it is still lacking, there is only one reason why I am publishing this book into the world.
I hope that the stories of people who sometimes made me feel ashamed and sometimes made me fall in love with them will reach you too.
If you ever feel lost, if you hate yourself so much that you can't stand it, or if you feel lonely and need comfort but have nowhere to turn, I hope that reading any of the lives introduced in this book will give you strength.
“Then I think I could ask for nothing more.”
- Strong life attitudes that will help you live a life without regrets
The author started out as a VJ (video journalist) for KBS's 'Documentary 3 Days' in 2007 and is currently working as a documentary director for tvN's 'You Quiz on the Block'.
'Documentary 3 Days' is a broadcast program that closely observes and records the situations and daily lives of people that occur in a specific space for a limited 72 hours. It began in 2007 and has been praised for its warm portrayal of our times until its grand finale in March 2022.
The author is an original member of the program and has worked as a VJ for 12 years since 2007, and has been in charge of interviews and filming for popular programs such as the Shinwol-dong junk shop episode, the National Institute of Scientific Investigation episode, the Noryangjin Gosi Village episode, the Pope Francis visit to Korea episode, the Buddhist monk Beopjeong's cremation episode, and the Dokdo Coast Guard episode.
Since 2019, he has been working as a documentary director on tvN's 'You Quiz on the Block'.
It is her job to conduct and film the interviews when additional filming of the cast is needed.
She says.
“As fate would have it, I met countless people on the road while working on documentaries, from ‘Documentary 3 Days’ to ‘You Quiz on the Block.’
They revealed to me the secrets and truths of life that I had never experienced before, and thanks to them, I began to find answers to life that I thought I would never be able to solve.
Also, thanks to the solid attitude toward life I learned from them, I was able to not give up even when I was sometimes tired and sometimes envious of others' lives, and was able to regain my center of life and move forward.
That's why I call them philosophers I met on the road.
I hope to meet more people in the future and learn from their wisdom and courage gained through vivid life stories.
“If we don’t forget the attitudes toward life we’ve learned and continue to practice them, won’t we be able to live a better life?”
“Never treat people as a means to an end.”
- Courtesy to myself, courtesy to others
In fact, when working on a documentary, there are times when you have to hold on to the railing of a ship in a typhoon and film the sailors, or when your fingers are frozen and unable to move as you want in -20 degree cold, and you have to hold the camera and film.
Going hungry is a common occurrence, and there are moments when you have to record the disaster scene up close, which is difficult to see with your eyes open because the situation has not yet been resolved.
Still, the author says that working on documentaries is the greatest luck he has ever experienced in his life.
Because I have learned so much by meeting so many people in various spaces and getting to know their lives.
Above all, it would be natural to be embarrassed if a stranger pointed a camera at the author, but most people welcomed the author wholeheartedly.
They were willing to show their space and tell their stories honestly.
In the hot weather, he cut a cool watermelon for me, saying that I had a hard time, and in the cold winter, he gave me a warm floor.
That wasn't all.
While reporting, I am bound to encounter moments that shake my emotions, and I also meet people who sincerely comfort me whenever I cannot hide my sadness.
The author says that thanks to such kind people who willingly shared their hearts without expecting anything in return, the world felt a little warmer, and he wanted to break down the walls he had built up out of fear of being hurt by others and just trust people for once.
“In my 20s, the world and people felt so difficult.
But while working on the documentary, I put myself in the shoes of people I hadn't known before and followed their perspectives, and I realized that I had more misunderstandings than I thought.
And when I learned about people's inner feelings, I felt much less angry, sad, or resentful.
And my attitude towards the world and people began to change.
Even when someone sets me up, instead of cowering in fear like before, I start to wonder if there's something wrong with them, and I start to reflect on myself first to see if I'm caught up in some kind of misunderstanding or prejudice.
And I learned that while it's important to do a good job, you also have to make sure you don't lose sight of people along the way.
When I realized that more people than I thought live without knowing the true feelings of others, it broke my heart, and I resolved to live my life expressing my true feelings to others whenever I wanted so that I wouldn't have any regrets."
“If only I could grow old like this”
-Why I want to meet more people in the future
The author has traveled the world with a camera for over 15 years, meeting countless people on the streets, from homeless people to presidents.
In particular, I was deeply impressed by meeting people who value and cherish others no matter the situation, people who never give up and have a will to live no matter how difficult it is, and people who are considerate of others and know how to look back on their day and reflect on it regardless of how much they have achieved. I found myself wanting to be like them.
Of course, whenever I got lost and wandered, I would recall the precious words they had given me and find my way back to the center of my life.
So the author says that he wants to meet more people in the future and learn a solid attitude toward life.
“While writing the book, I was reminded of the people who gave me strength at some point in my life or who showed me attitudes I wanted to emulate.
The fact that there are more kind, warm, and cool people in the world than you think.
Although it is still lacking, there is only one reason why I am publishing this book into the world.
I hope that the stories of people who sometimes made me feel ashamed and sometimes made me fall in love with them will reach you too.
If you ever feel lost, if you hate yourself so much that you can't stand it, or if you feel lonely and need comfort but have nowhere to turn, I hope that reading any of the lives introduced in this book will give you strength.
“Then I think I could ask for nothing more.”
GOODS SPECIFICS
- Publication date: September 30, 2022
- Page count, weight, size: 312 pages | 420g | 142*202*20mm
- ISBN13: 9791190538480
- ISBN10: 1190538482
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