Yohan Kim is a Seoul-based publisher and the CEO of Tteoreum Publishing. After Übermensch sold over 300,000 copies in South Korea within a year, he set out to bring its message to readers around the world. Today, a special 300,000-copy edition of Übermensch has been released in South Korea.
Book Introduction
Übermensch is not simply a book about Nietzsche. It is a philosophical declaration about living by one’s own will rather than by the expectations and gaze of others.
Inspired by the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, particularly Human, All Too Human, this book reconstructs Nietzsche’s core ideas into modern language and practical reflection for contemporary life. Rather than functioning as an academic interpretation, it confronts the reader with one fundamental question: How should a person live when no one else can live life on their behalf?
The Übermensch presented in this book is not a flawless hero or mythical superhuman. It is a person who faces pain without escape, questions inherited values, and continuously re-creates themselves through adversity, solitude, and conscious choice.
Across 113 reflections, this book explores self-overcoming, emotional mastery, freedom, morality, relationships, responsibility, and the courage to think independently in a world filled with noise and conformity.
Übermensch does not offer shallow motivation or temporary comfort. Instead, it demands something more difficult: to create your own standards, to confront yourself honestly, and to live deliberately even within an unfair and uncertain world.
Table of Contents
CHAPTER 1
What Does Not Destroy Me Makes Me Stronger
Forty-Three Attitudes Toward Self-Overcoming and Growth
This chapter explores pain, solitude, discipline, resilience, and personal transformation. It examines how hardship becomes the foundation of strength, and why genuine growth begins when individuals stop escaping themselves and begin confronting reality directly.
CHAPTER 2
Every Face You Encounter Shapes Who You Become
Thirty-One Approaches to Relationships and Emotional Mastery
This chapter reflects on love, anger, resentment, empathy, shame, revenge, emotional control, and human relationships. It asks how one can remain emotionally grounded without losing oneself to the expectations, judgments, and emotions of others.
CHAPTER 3
Your Perspective Determines the Size of Your Life
Thirty-Nine Ways of Seeing the World
This chapter expands into questions surrounding morality, justice, freedom, responsibility, truth, and human nature. It challenges inherited beliefs and encourages readers to think independently about what it truly means to live consciously.
Inside the Book
“If the world offers no definitive solution, then the answer must be shaped by you. This is what real freedom means.” (p.9)
“Do not wait for imagined companions to protect you. Become the one who protects yourself.” (p.11)
“What matters is not the dream. It is what you do in waking reality.” (p.26)
“Happiness follows naturally along the path you walk; it is not the destination itself.” (p.29)
“Comparison does not lead you forward. It weakens you and leaves you in despair.” (p.42)
“If you are shaken, it is not a failure. It means something is changing.” (p.48)
“The world does not define you. The way you respond to it makes you distinct.” (p.36)
“True courage is acting according to your inner truth, unmoved by the gaze of others.” (p.76)
“You are not a supporting character in someone else’s story. You must become the protagonist of your own life.” (p.76)
“Pain is not merely a trial. It is the process through which we are shaped into something more solid.” (p.89)
“The standards imposed by the world are not answers. The lives designed by others are not obligations.” (p.246)
“If you have fallen, it is proof that you have walked. If you have been shaken, it means you were moving forward.” (p.246)
Publisher’s Review
There are books that explain philosophy, and there are books that force readers to confront themselves. Übermensch belongs to the latter.
The book originated in Seoul, South Korea, through Tteoreum Publishing, an independent publishing house founded by Yohan Kim. First released in Korea under the name Anonymous, the work quickly became a bestseller, resonating with readers through its uncompromising reflections on self-overcoming, freedom, suffering, and personal responsibility.
Now, Übermensch has been reimagined for a global audience.
Drawing from the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche while stripping away academic distance and outdated abstraction, Yohan Kim transforms existential thought into direct, modern reflection. The result is not a conventional philosophy book, but a sharp and deeply personal confrontation with life itself.
What makes Übermensch especially compelling is that its philosophy does not remain confined to the page. The author himself embodies the spirit the book speaks of: a life built not around approval, conformity, or comfort, but around self-creation, discipline, independence, and the courage to move beyond imposed limitations.
For this reason, the book carries a rare sense of authenticity. Its ideas do not feel theoretical or decorative. They feel lived.
This book does not romanticize suffering, nor does it offer easy comfort. Instead, it repeatedly asks difficult questions.
What if exhaustion is not failure, but transformation?
What if freedom begins the moment one stops living for approval?
What if pain is not the end of growth, but its beginning?
With clear prose and uncompromising honesty, Übermensch explores the psychological realities of modern life: anxiety, comparison, loneliness, emotional exhaustion, social pressure, self-doubt, and the burden of identity.
Yet the book ultimately moves toward something larger than despair.
It insists that even in uncertainty, human beings still possess the ability to create meaning, establish values, and consciously shape themselves.
Rather than offering answers to escape life, Übermensch challenges readers to become strong enough to face it directly.
This is not a book for passive reading.
It is a book that remains with the reader long after the final page.