Pyongyang: A Journey in North Korea is a black-and-white graphic novel by the Canadian Québécois author Guy Delisle, published in 2003.
He also meets foreign diplomats, NGO workers in the World Food Programme and businessmen, such as French engineers installing an HDTV transmitter.
Accompanied by his guide, he visits the massive statue of Kim Il Sung, the Pyongyang Metro, the legation quarter, the Diplomatic Club (former Romanian embassy), the Arch of Triumph, the Juche Tower, the International Friendship Exhibition, the USS Pueblo, the enormous Ryugyong Hotel, the Taekwondo Hall, the Children's Palace and the Museum of Imperialist Occupation.
Delisle notes things such as tightrope walking, the absence of disabled and elderly people, North Korean music propaganda, the cult of personality for past leader Kim Il Sung and his son Kim Jong Il, the required presence of his translator and guide, nearly-expired water from the South, Coca-Cola and kimjongilias.
When questioned regarding the lack of disabled people in Pyongyang, his guide asserts and seems to genuinely believe that North Korea has none, and that the children of the "Korean race" are all born healthy, strong and intelligent.