GOOD COP, BAD COP - Ed Lin for President
Transcription
GOOD COP, BAD COP - Ed Lin for President
GOODCOP,BADCOP MaverickwriterEd Lin invadesChinatown, Colin Brennan WriterNeelanjanaBanerjee Photographer WRITERED LIN has a knack for writing about charactersthat inhabitthe underside of the AsianAmericanDream.In his first novel,Waylaid,the main characteris a 12-year-old Chinesekid who helpshis parents rent sleazymotel rooms to hookers and johns on the JerseyShore,whileplaying Atari and obsessingover gettinglaid. The slim novelcapturedthe angstof being an outsiderkid and the gritty life of working classAsianAmericans.The heroof his new novel,Ihls ls a Busf-set in New York City's Chinatowncirca 1976-is a rookie cop with a bad caseof problems.He'sthe only Chineseguy on the force in Chinatown,and a seriousalcoholicto boot. Because of his brash, unapologetic subject matter,I sort of expected Lin to be moroseand serious.But he was actually a bit goofy, with a loud infectiouslaugh that boomedaroundthe littlecoffeeshop in San Francisco'sNob Hill,wherewe met while he was in town from New York City. He was more interestedin crackingbad jokesand talkingabout his obsessionwith musicthan focusingon his careeras one of the most originalAsian Americanwriters today. L in, no w in h is m id- 3O s was , bor n in Queens,but his family moved to Jersey when he was 3 yearsold. A few yearslater, his parents purchasedthe sleazy motel, whichhe so memorablyusedas his model in Waylaid.But Lin says the real one was considerablyworse. "l had lo make Waylaid abil more tame. That place was really crazy. Peoplewould get into huge fights there.They would get in their cars and try to run each otherover,"he says,laughing. Lin's parentssold the motel when he was a sophomorein high school and the PA-a town familymovedto Williamsport, that Lin refers to as a "garbagedump" for its racist ways. Yet, the move helped jumpstarthis writing. "Moving to Pennsylvania.that was s uc h a sc h i s mi n m y m i n d .I a l m o s th a d t o createanotheridentityto talk to myself," Lrnsays. After highschool,Lin escapedto New York City. He double-majoredin applied engineeringand Iiteraturewriiing at Columbia University.Since he was already writingforthe universitypaper,he decided to go to journalismschool and has been workingas a financialreporterand editor ever since.But eventhough he didn't get an MFA, he took many writingclassesin and out of school. "Some people really liked me, some really hated me," Lin says. "l remember this one professorat Columbiajust hated my guts, man. lt kind of helped. I am a kind of kid. lf they negativereinforcement hat eit , l 'l l b e l i k e'l 'l l s h o w y o u ! " ' After college.Lin focused on writing novels.He had a few falsestarts.but then. Lin'scousin-whose familyalsoran a motel in Jersey-committedsuicide. "l was like: 'God, this kid grew up in as me,'" Lin says the samecircumstances seriously."l remembergoingto hisfuneral. Right after that, I put the basics of Waylaid togetherin three months." But the mainstreampublishingworld wasn't quite readyfor such a bold novel. Most publisherstold Lin he should tone down the sex and that he was crazy if he thought anyonewas going to publishthe book. But Lin felt as thouqh he couldn't maKeany cnanges. "All the sex, racism and homophobia had to be there,"Lin says. "l was just trying to keep it as realas possible." After a year or so of rejections,Lin met SunyoungLee,the editorof the small, AsianAmericanfocusedKayaPress,who decided to publish it. Waylaidwent on to s o m e a c c l a i m ,i n c l u d i n gw i n n i n ga R e a d er's ChoiceAward from the Asian American Writers'Workshop. Lin had already begun work on his new book at the time, and the genesis came from his own experienceof getting his haircutin Chinatown-eventhoughon the surfaceit seemsa worldawavfrom the horny little kid ot Waylaid. "l don't speak Mandarinthat well, so I don't even try to speak it in Chinatown. This freed it up for people to talk about me," he says. "When I would get my hair cut, I could hearthe ladytalkingabout me. Shewouldsay:"Thisisn'tChinesehair.lt's all curly.What'swrong with this guy?" Lin was amazed at the way he was so alienatedfrom the denizensof Chinatown,even though he looked just like them. "l became reallyinterestedin that I I I It -i h ''T HER E W A ST I - I I ST I M EI N T HE EARL Y '90S,W H E NT H EA S I A NA M ERICAN BOOKS CO M I N GO U TW E R EJ U S TS O F UCKING BAD.TH E YW O U L DL I K EP H YSICAL L Y % HURTM E W I . I E NI S A WT H EM .' ' g@ idea. I thought: How could I possiblybe more foreignto them?" Lin says.Then he figuredit out: A Chinesecop would be the biggestoutsiderof all. Ihls ls a Busf, also publishedby Kaya, is part murder-mystery,part downward spiral.OfficerChow is an angry,recently returnedVietnamvet with a major drinking problem,assignedonly to represent the force at variousChinatownbanquets, when in realitythe relationshipbeiween the immigrantcommunitiesin Chinatown and the policeforce-like today-is nonexistent.Chow is a realanti-hero,with his anger and drinkingso out of controlthat it's painfulto read.Thereare momentsin the book wherethe despairis so tangible that this readerfound herselfyellingat the pages.But he is balancedout with a grand cast of characters,includingthe unforgettableChinesemidgetwho has neverlost a gameof chessin hislife.Somehow,through the harshnessand the intrigue,Lin'sbook reclaimsChinatownfrom the clutchesof writerswho have been exotifyingthis enclave for the past 20 years.There is nothing exoticabout what Chow goes through and how he handleshimselfthroughmuch of the book, but it is moving. Lin says that his relationship to Asian Americanliteraturewas not an especially friendlyone. "There was this time in the early'90s whenthe AsianAmericanbooks comingout werejust so fuckingbad," Lin says,cringing."Theywould like physically hurt me when I saw them. Actually,going back in time, the stuff from the '50s and '60s was a lot more acceptableto me. Joy Luck Club was a huge breakthroughand then it sealedthe door. lt was kind of like Bruce Lee coming out and then having everythingafter it have to be about Kung Fu." At the end of the day, Lin just wants to keepwriting,puttingout storiesthat he thinks are importantto the largerworld, not just one specificcommunity. "l've neverthoughtof myselfas striving to be this greatAsianAmericanwriter," Lin said."l want to push it to wherepeople aren't really saying 'Ed Lin writes about Chinesepeople,Ed Lin writesaboutAsian people.'I want them to say 'Ed Lin writes aboutAmericansin America.'f Neelanjano Banerjee has wtilten an unpublshec) collection of short storles entitled "Misbehaving."