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Duck quacks Grey to Pete
Betty dreams and wakes with Gene
Peggy wants Don’s life.
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Duck quacks Grey to Pete
Betty dreams and wakes with Gene
Peggy wants Don’s life.
A quick roundup of recent happenings:
1) UPI Asia recently reviewed the novel:
While Everything Asian is a story of the immigrant experience in which culture clash plays a strong role, it strays from the typical (adult) view and goes both small and large: small in the sense that protagonist Joon (David) Kim is just twelve and large in that the novel’s second story points towards a bigger picture. Peddlers Town is its own community — shop and restaurant owners coming and going as the Kims work their way towards the American Dream.
2) My Significant Object ended up selling for $52, which is no small potatoes. In fact, I think I can buy at least a few hundred potatoes for that amount. My hearty thank you to the story lover and eBayer who purchased the little bird and the little story.
3) I have two readings coming up this weekend, one in Baltimore and one in DC. If you happen to be in the area, come on by and say hello.
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Ho-Ho, Jai Alai!
Fun Peggy gets her Roomie.
RIP, Grandpa.
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She’s Peggy Olson
And she wants some mary jane
For Don, Old-Fashioned.
Last summer, my wife and I held a barbeque in our back yard. After the event, I saw a little yellow bird with a black crown and wings on the knickknack shelf above the toilet in the bathroom. I’d never seen this figurine before. The bird, its head turned ninety degrees to the left of its body, gazed at me squarely with unblinking black eyes.
When I asked my wife about where she got the figurine, she had no idea what I was talking about. The figurine suddenly took on the cold heft of an object that existed only to tell us how much it didn’t belong here.
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Bye bye Patio
And Madison Square Garden
But welcome home, Dad.
A couple of weeks ago, I read at The Raconteur, one of the coolest used bookstores in Jersey.
I have no idea who that guy is, but he’s in the next picture, too.
I read from the chapter “Jhee Hong,” which I thought was appropriate since it takes place in a used bookstore. It was a great event, lots of interested readers and Q&A afterwards.
And since I can’t leave a bookstore without buying some books, these are the titles I left with.
That’s Matrimony by Joshua Henkin (who was at the BooksNJ festival earlier in the year and I should’ve gotten the book then, but we were pressed for time – but no matter, I got a signed copy!), Voodoo Heart by Scott Snyder, and Richard Price‘s Freedomland. Haven’t read any of them, but that’ll soon change.
And this past week, the Hunterdon County Library invited me for a reading.
A little while ago, the director who put together BooksNJ asked the participating authors if they could say something about libraries, and here’s what I wrote.
Without libraries, I never would’ve discovered books on tape. I’m still surprised that so many people haven’t experienced the joy of listening to a book narrated by a professional — they are, without question, missing out in a big way. What hooked me was Frank Muller‘s narration of Chris Crutcher‘s collection Athletic Shorts, and since then, I must’ve gone through the majority of Muller’s performances (The Prince of Tides, 1984, The Great Gatsby — you can’t go wrong with anything he reads). It’s unfortunate that he’s no longer with us, but his work will live on, thanks to all the great libraries.
If you have a road trip coming up or would like a change of pace for the daily commute, go to your local library and get yourself a Muller.
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Draper and Sal, flying
Pete and Ken, heads of accounts
Happy birthday, Dick.
I was fortunate enough to be interviewed by two excellent publications recently. The first one is in Fiction Writers Review, conducted by Jeremiah Chamberlin when I was in Ann Arbor for the book festival this past May. We gabbed for a good hour and had a grand old time about my novel and writing in general. If you haven’t visited Fiction Writers Review, do so immediately. The number of wonderful writers who’ve contributed so many sharp analyses about the art of fiction is nothing short of staggering.
The second interview was with The Browser, and this one is a little different. Anna Blundy asked me to name five books about the Asian American Experience, and although I was initially stumped (five is tough!), I managed to come up with a list that is representative of my very personal view at that specific point in time (i.e., totally, completely subjective). Regardless, it was a great opportunity to discuss a quintet of very different Asian American works.
1) The good folks at Hyphen Magazine (which is one of the most beautifully designed glossies you’ll come across) were kind enough to give me a nice capsule review (which I had converted to text automatically via Free OCR).
2) There’s now finally a Kindle version of my novel. Not that I can see it since I don’t have a Kindle, but it’s nice to know that for those who do, they can now read it on their fancy-schmancy ebook reader.