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- <text id=91TT1212>
- <title>
- June 03, 1991: Fresh Voices Above the Noisy Din
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 03, 1991 Date Rape
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 66
- Fresh Voices Above the Noisy Din
- </hdr><body>
- <p>New works by four Chinese-American writers splendidly illustrate
- the frustrations, humor and eternal wonder of the immigrant's
- life
- </p>
- <p>By JANICE C. SIMPSON
- </p>
- <p> After receiving his first stack of rejection slips in the
- mid-1970s, David Wong Louie made a painful change in the short
- stories he sent out: he stripped them of all traces of ethnic
- identity. "What I'd do is write in the first person about
- somebody like myself, but I wouldn't identify him as Chinese
- American," he says. "I was trying to satisfy my paranoia about
- what people wanted to read or what editors thought people wanted
- to read. And I didn't see anything out there to tell me
- differently."
- </p>
- <p> There wasn't much out there to see. Until the 1976 success
- of Maxine Hong Kingston's The Woman Warrior, a luminous
- collection of stories that mixed memoirs about the author's San
- Francisco girlhood with mystical tales of female warriors and
- monkey kings, Asian Americans were the invisible men and women
- in American literature. Even after Kingston's success, a dozen
- years passed before another Asian-American fiction writer
- achieved fortune and fame. First-time novelist Amy Tan's The Joy
- Luck Club, a loosely connected series of stories about
- Chinese-American mothers and daughters, sold an astonishing
- 275,000 hard-cover copies. Publishers took note, and this spring
- brings not only Tan's second novel, The Kitchen God's Wife, but
- also splendid debuts by three other Chinese-American writers.
- </p>
- <p> Gus Lee's China Boy ($19.95) is this season's major
- fiction offering from Dutton, which paid the novice writer an
- advance of nearly $100,000 and ordered a first printing of
- 75,000 copies. Houghton Mifflin, which had ordered 11,000 copies
- of Gish Jen's Typical American ($19.95), increased the run by
- 5,000 as pre publication excitement grew for this engaging tale
- of one immigrant family's pursuit of the American Dream. Two
- houses fought to publish Pangs of Love (Knopf; $19), Louie's
- sharp and quirky collection of short stories.
- </p>
- <p> The enthusiasm among publishers for Asian-American writing
- can be attributed in part to the growth of the country's Asian
- population, which nearly doubled, from 3.5 million to 6.9
- million, over the past decade. But editors say it also reflects
- the fact that more Asian Americans are writing--and writing
- good books. "They're second generation, and they're better
- educated and ready to tell about their experiences," says
- Seymour Lawrence, Jen's publisher.
- </p>
- <p> Some cynics warn, however, that the fascination with
- Asian-American fiction may be only skin-deep. "When there is a
- great success like Amy Tan's book, everyone is out there looking
- for his or her own Amy Tan," says Shannon Ravenel, the recently
- retired editor of the annual collection of The Best American
- Short Stories. Louie, 36, predicts that "if Gus Lee or Gish Jen
- don't come through with big sales, then the next wave of
- interest in Asian-American writers may not come for another 15
- years." That would be a shame, because each of these authors
- possesses the kind of fresh and original voice that marks a
- genuine talent. "We're all individual writers," says Lee. "It
- would be awful if we were compressed into one single dumpling."
- </p>
- <p> Even when Louie stopped putting Chinese names in his
- stories, his prose captured the alienation the author felt
- growing up as the son of a Chinese-laundry owner in a Long
- Island, N.Y., suburb. Pangs of Love, whose darkly humorous tales
- were written over the past seven years, recounts the adventures
- of a Chinese-American waiter working in a Japanese sushi bar,
- an Americanized son who can communicate with his
- Cantonese-speaking mother only in a pidgin version of her
- language, and the Chinese invention of baseball. Says Louie:
- "Asian Americans are still marginalized. I feel I have to write
- from those margins and tell what the experience is like."
- </p>
- <p> Jen works the margins too. The Chang family in Typical
- American are devoted baseball fans who call themselves the
- Chang-kees in honor of their favorite team, but "the one time
- they went to an actual game, people had called them names and
- told them to go back to their laundry." Jen, 35, who grew up in
- Scarsdale, N.Y., and graduated from Harvard, is especially
- intrigued by how outsiders move from the margins into the
- mainstream.
- </p>
- <p> Typical American chronicles that bittersweet journey for
- Ralph Chang, a Chinese engineering student who comes to the U.S.
- in 1947 for his doctorate; his wife Helen; and his sister
- Theresa. The Changs initially disdain the lack of tradition they
- describe as "typical American" behavior, but soon they are
- stir-frying hot dogs. They also fall under the spell of Grover
- Ding, an American-born Svengali of free enterprise who leads
- Ralph into a dubious fried-chicken business, seduces Helen and
- causes Theresa, the family loyalist, to leave home. The happy
- ending for the Changs comes not in abandoning the American Dream
- but in finding a way to make it their own. "I wanted to broaden
- the immigrant experience," says Jen. "The idea is to give
- America back to Americans again in a fresh way."
- </p>
- <p> It would be hard to find a more all-American story than
- Lee's delightful China Boy, a semiautobiographical novel based
- on the author's childhood. Kai Ting, the title character, is
- the pampered youngest child and only son of a once wealthy
- family that fled China following the Communist takeover and
- settled in a poor--and predominantly black--neighborhood in
- San Francisco. When Kai's mother dies, his father brings home
- a white wife. She institutes a harsh Americanization campaign
- that bans all Chinese food, language and customs from the house
- and abandons her stepson to regular beatings at the hands of
- neighborhood bullies who call him by the humiliating name China
- Boy. Kai gets little help from his father, who "was in an
- untenable position, forked on the cultural chessboard where the
- white squares of intellectual China met the hard black
- industrial squares of the West." But the boy does find allies
- in a black family, a Hispanic mechanic, a Chinese scholar who
- is an old family friend and a trio of boxing coaches at the
- Y.M.C.A. With their help, Kai learns how to make--and protect--a place for himself in America.
- </p>
- <p> An attorney who attended West Point, Lee, 44, had never
- written fiction before. But he is a natural storyteller who
- stocks his tale with vivid characters, spirited dialogue and
- good humor. The book began as a private memoir for Lee's two
- children, but Kai Ting's struggle for self-identity is sure to
- win the hearts of a much wider audience. "I didn't write this
- book for commercial success," says Lee. "But I'd like to see
- Asian-American writers have the chance to succeed and be read."
- With books like these, they deserve to be.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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