First Time Out @ Boston Public Library, 4/30 6PM

I’ll be appearing with Tania James and Marc Fitten at the Boston Public Library tomorrow:

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First Time Out: Debut Novelists Share Their Stories

Thursday, April 30, 6 p.m.
Orientation Room, Central Library, Copley Square

Marc Fitten, Tania James and Sung J. Woo have very little in common on the surface, but all three are the authors of debut novels, and at this very special panel event, we will dig down to find out just how they really are different, and how they might be similar.

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Read-It-First!

readitfirst_logoThis week, my book is being excerpted at Read-It-First:

Join St. Martin’s Read-it-First e-mail book club and sample a hot new release each week. Each weekday morning, we’ll send you a taste of the week’s featured title right to your inbox. By the end of the week, you’ll have read approximately a few chapters, enough to decide whether it is the right book for you.

So if you haven’t signed up yet, there’s no time like the present.

4/25/09: Borders at Eatontown, NJ

As it turns out, you can go home again — and thank goodness for that. This was my hometown reading, at the Borders I visit at least once a month.  In attendance was my first ESL teacher, the person who taught me how to read, write, and speak this language I now know so well.  In addition to the novel, I also read my short story “Limits.”  It was a fitting piece to read, since the bulk of the people there (my high school friends) knew the actual story the fiction was based on.

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Review from Christian Science Monitor

From the Christian Science Monitor:

While Woo is writing an immigrant coming-of-age tale, the emotions and sheer messiness of the Kims’ home life will resonate with anyone in possession of a relative. And while bad ‘80s fashion (and was there any other kind?) is always a reliable target, Woo’s novel has a tenderness underlying the humor and his characters are complicatedly human.

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4/22/09: Reading at Warren County Community College

To quote another fine New Jersey artist — oh what a night! I live in the wonderful town of Washington in beautiful Warren County, and I can literally walk to the Warren County Community College.  This was my second reading, and I read most of the first chapter to keep it around twenty minutes, but that’s not all — I got to share the stage with the students who won the 2009 Warren County High School Fiction and Poetry Contests.  Plus we were also celebrating the release of Ars Poetica, the art/literary magazine of the college, so many of the authors who were published in the journal got up to read as well.  Professor BJ Ward was the master of ceremonies, and he gave me an introduction that I didn’t deserve (which didn’t stop me from accepting it with great thanks).  It was an evening of literary community in my very home town, and I couldn’t have been more proud.

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4/18/09: East Coast Book Launch at KGB Bar

It was, as usual, a joy to be at KGB Bar.  Most of my life, I’ve been a part of the audience, but on this Saturday night, I was one of the two readers (the other being Wendy Lee).  The wonderful folks at Debut Lit put the great event together, and Alexander Chee was kind enough to come all the way from Amherst to introduce both Wendy and myself.  Good books, good liquor.  Life is good.

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Page 69 Test and Emerging Writers Network

Two posts from the good folks at the Page 69 Test and EWN.  In case you don’t know what the Page 69 test is:

Marshall McLuhan, the guru of The Gutenberg Galaxy (1962), recommends that the browser turn to page 69 of any book and read it. If you like that page, buy the book. It works. Rule One, then: browse powerfully and read page 69. [Campaign for the American Reader]

The Page 69 Test

The thing I was most afraid of was this: that my page 69 would be blank. Lucky for me, it’s page 70 that’s got nothing on it.

Page 69 is a short one, with just a single paragraph, but it serves a crucial purpose: a transition point to bring the reader back to the central characters of the novel, the Kims.

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Emerging Writers Network

Tuesday should see piles of Sung J. Woo’s debut novel, Everything Asian Woo (2009, Thomas Dunne Books), in bookstores as it hits its publishing date.  I’ve not read the whole thing yet, but can say that I’m about 1/3 of the way through and enjoying it enough to be pretty sure I’ll have it finished up before that pub date hits.

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Google Alert and Korean Interview

google_alertIn preparation for the avalanche of media coverage that will be exploding like a volcano (talk about mixing some bad metaphors), I have set up a Google Alert with my name, and lo and behold, I actually got a hit.  The article is from my hometown newspaper, the Warren Reporter.  It all looks good, except they said my novel came out last month.  But hey, press is press, so I’m grateful.

koreadailyThe other bit of news I found today was that an email interview I did a little while ago got in The Korea Daily.  It’s been there for about two weeks, so if I hadn’t been so lazy setting up my Google Alert, maybe this would’ve been my first.  In any case, for those who want to read the interview in English that I’d originally done with the reporter, check out the exchange below.  The Korean version has been shifted around here and there, but it’s basically the same thing.


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School Library Journal Review

In the May 2009 issue of School Library Journal, the following review will appear:

With a mix of humor and drama, Everything Asian makes a fine addition to recreational reading lists and a good companion to Gene Luen Yang’s graphic novel American Born Chinese.

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Yang is currently doing the Funny Pages for the Times Magazine.  He’s one of many great Asian-American graphic novelists out there — Yang, Adrian Tomine, Shaun Tan (though I suppose he’s Asian-Australian?), just to name a few.  If you haven’t read American Born Chinese, Shortcomings, or The Arrival, you’re missing out.

So with this latest review, the quartet of prepub journals are done: Publisher’s Weekly, Booklist, Kirkus, and (School) Library Journal.  So far, so good.

Toni Morrison, J. Robert Lennon…and Me

camThere’s actually a page on the Internet now that features the legendary novelist Toni Morrison, the talented Mr. J. Robert Lennon (if you haven’t read The Funnies, you really should), and me.  As you may have guessed from the graphic on the left, the page is from  Cornell Alumni Magazine.  Morrison received her M.A. back in 1955, Lennon currently teaches there, and I received my B.A. in 1994.  Let’s just say I’m grateful  to be occupying the same literary space as these fine folks (and Professor Ken McClane, too, a phenomenal poet, who signed off on me taking a class at Wells College during my junior year, but that’s a whole another story).