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Love, Disappointment Course Through 4 Classic Asian American Novels

In her foreword to America Is in the Heart — Carlos Bulosan's classic 1946 novel about Filipinx and Mexican migrant workers on the West Coast — the Filipina American novelist Elaine Castillo asks readers, "Do you remember how old you were when you first read a book that had a character who looked and lived like you in it?"

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Other segments from the episode on May 28, 2019

Fresh Air with Terry Gross, May 28, 2019: Interview with B. Janet Hibbs and Anthony Rostain; Review of 4 novels by Asian American authors.

Transcript

TERRY GROSS, HOST:

This is FRESH AIR. May is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, and our book critic Maureen Corrigan marked the occasion by reading the four reprints of mid-20th century novels by Asian American authors that Penguin Classics has just brought out in striking paperback editions. Here's her review.

MAUREEN CORRIGAN, BYLINE: In her foreword to "America Is In The Heart," Carlos Bulosan's classic 1946 novel about Filipinx and Mexican migrant workers on the West Coast, the Filipina American novelist Elaine Castillo asks readers, do you remember how old you were when you first read a book that had a character who looked and lived like you in it?

As a white reader, my answer to Castillo's question is most assuredly different than that of readers of color. I can't share the thrill of discovering people who look like me in the pages of Bulosan's gorgeous and brutal autobiographical novel, nor in the other three mid-century Asian American novels that Penguin Classics has just reprinted. But I can experience a different type of thrill - that of being blown away by the work of some of these writers and understanding America better through the fierce love and disappointment that courses through their pages.

Bulosan is the best-known novelist of the four. His book "America Is In The Heart" has long been celebrated as the Filipinx counterpart to Steinbeck's "Grapes Of Wrath." Bulosan's first-person narrator here is beaten up for being a goo-goo, or brown monkey, as he tries to organize fellow workers and rides boxcars up and down the West Coast, looking for subsistence jobs in kitchens, laundries and out on farm fields. Yet the novel ends with the narrator's affirmation that no man, no one at all could destroy my faith in America, a reassurance that no doubt boosted the novel's eventual wide acceptance onto the college curricula.

Wide acceptance aren't the words you'd think of in connection with the work of Chinese American writer H.T. Tsiang. His novel "The Hanging On Union Square" was rejected by virtually every publisher in America, prompting him to self-publish in 1935. I can sympathize with those flummoxed publishers. This book, like much of Gertrude Stein's work, is much more fun to talk about than to read. It follows an everyman hero named Mr. Nut over the course of a single night in New York as he wanders into communist cafeterias, Bowery flophouses and a violent confrontation with a capitalist named Mr. System in Union Square.

Forget Mr Nut. Tsiang's own life story sounds like it would make a fabulous novel or film. He was born in poverty in Shanghai, became a secretary to Chinese President Sun Yat-sen and eventually wound up working as an actor in Hollywood known for performing an R-rated one-man one-hour adaptation of "Hamlet" every Friday night for twelve years. Tsiang nestles comfortably into the American oddball creative tradition.

Korean American novelist Younghill Kang didn't need to self-publish. He was taken on by Maxwell Perkins, the legendary Scribner's editor who counted Fitzgerald and Hemingway among his authors. Kang's 1937 novel "East Goes West" is a coming-to-America odyssey that charts the wanderings of its hero, Chungpa Han, as he flees Japanese-occupied Korea for America. Kang is distinguished by his stylistic gusto. Here, for instance, is his rendering of that iconic immigrant moment - Chungpa Han's first sighting of the skyline of Manhattan.

(Reading) A city of Babel towers casually, easily strewn end up against the skies. They stood at the brink, close-crowded, the brink of America, these giantesses, these fates. No earth clung to their skirts. They spurned the earth, and there was no monument to the machine age like America.

I saved for last the novel that for me is the greatest discovery - John Okada's 1957 book "No-No Boy." Okada was a second-generation Japanese American, a Nisei who served in World War II. His brilliant noirish novel dives deep into the fractures in the Japanese American community after the war. Some Nisei men in protest of the forced internment of Japanese Americans refused to serve in the military or to pledge allegiance to the U.S. They became known as no-no boys. After the war, their community turned away from them just as it later turned away from Okada's truth-telling novel.

"No-No Boy" is filled with charged moments and observations - Japanese American men nervously wearing I Am Chinese buttons, the crucial difference of an apostrophe that turns the Japanese name Ohara into the Irish O'Hara and the constant refrain of, go back to Tokyo, boy, that our main character, a young man named Ichiro, hears on the streets of Seattle. "No-No Boy" is spectacular and troubling and topical.

Elaine Castillo said of "America Is In The Heart" to not read it is, to put it simply, not to know America. Certainly the same can be said of most, if not all, of these classic Asian American novels.

GROSS: Maureen Corrigan teaches literature at Georgetown University. She reviewed four reprints of mid-20th century novels by Asian American authors that Penguin Classics has just brought out in paperback editions.

(SOUNDBITE OF STEFON HARRIS' "UNTIL")

GROSS: Tomorrow on FRESH AIR, my guests will be children's book illustrator and author Maira Kalman and her son, designer Alex Kalman. They collaborated on the new book and museum exhibit "Sara Berman's Closet." It's kind of a fairy tale about Maira's mother, Alex's grandmother, who went from a Belarus shtetl to Palestine to Manhattan. At age 60, she left her husband and started a new life and started wearing only white. I hope you can join us.

FRESH AIR's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Amy Salit, Phyllis Myers, Sam Briger, Lauren Krenzel, Heidi Saman, Therese Madden, Mooj Zadie, Thea Chaloner and Seth Kelley. I'm Terry Gross.

(SOUNDBITE OF STEFON HARRIS' "UNTIL") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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