My second reading is happening later tonight in the city of angels, Los Angeles — so please come on by, all you lovely Angelenos!
Thursday, September 17 7pm
Book Soup
8818 Sunset Blvd
W. Hollywood, CA 90069
My second reading is happening later tonight in the city of angels, Los Angeles — so please come on by, all you lovely Angelenos!
Thursday, September 17 7pm
Book Soup
8818 Sunset Blvd
W. Hollywood, CA 90069
Today was my final full day in San Francisco, and was it ever full. It started out innocuously enough, but then turned into something more exasperating/menacing/thrilling, mostly due to my stupidity. But I’m jumping the gun here. I wanted to get back to Betelnut, a restaurant that my wife and I really liked the first time we were in San Francisco together (and I also wanted to add to the “Love Love on Location” thing I’m doing on Instagram). No problems there.
Afterwards, I walked over to the John Pence Gallery, something else I wanted to do while I was here. Greg Gandy is an artist I’ve admired for quite some time, and I wanted a chance to see his works live. Pence himself was there and showed me a bunch of his stuff, which was unfortunately way out of my price range. But it was great to see some of them in person.
About this point was when I noticed that my phone was at about 50% battery capacity. This was not news to me, as the night before, I almost ran out of charge, something I’ve never experienced before. That’s because at home, I hardly use data when I’m out and I never have the GPS on, both of which I had to activate in order to use Citymapper. For those who have never used this app, I can’t tell you how wonderful it is, especially here in San Francisco, where the bus system is not easy to navigate. The only problem with this app is that it runs through the battery like there’s no tomorrow, at least with my cheap Android phone. I didn’t expect this, but I did think ahead before the trip, about how invaluable smartphones have become, especially during travel. So I’d brought my spare, older smartphone with me. The night before, I ended up draining both phones by the time I got back to my home away from home.
Anyway, I had about 45 minutes before I had to head out to Oakland for a tennis event that the lovely Eddie Pasternak (he’s not only a fantastic tennis teaching pro, he’s an excellent jazz guitarist) at The Hills Swim & Tennis Club. That wasn’t enough time to recharge the battery all the way, but it got to 70% when I headed out the door. By the time I’d arrived at the club, the battery was already down to the low forties, so I placed the phone in airplane mode.
I met Eddie and the half dozen others who were attending the event, and just as we started to play, it started raining! A sparse few drops soon became a steady drizzle, though I did get someone to take this ridiculous photo before we stopped.
What am I doing here? I look like somebody who has never played this game. Sigh. Anyway, so no tennis. Which was disappointing but not terribly so, because we all went in and talked about the US Open that had just concluded, and then the discussion went deeper into tennis. I was thrilled, actually; it was so nice to talk about the game and the players with such knowledgeable fans. And then I talked about my book, about publishing, we had some cheese and crackers and fresh fruit, and all was fine and dandy.
Eddie was kind enough to drop me off at the BART station, and after I bid him thanks and goodbye and saw him pull away, I realized I’d left my racquet back at the club. So incredibly boneheaded of me. Now I had to turn my phone back on, call the driver on Lyft. After the trip back to the club and back to the BART station, the battery was down to the low 20s. This was gonna be super close, too close to use to get back home. But I had my spare phone…except I didn’t! I left it in the Lyft guy’s car for some unknown, crazy reason.
So I changed my destination. Instead of going home, I would go to the Amazon Locker on Baxter.
What is Amazon Locker? I had no idea what it was, either, until I ordered an external battery pack late last night and had it delivered there overnight. Since I did not want to go through the danger of being without Citymapper (I would literally not know where to go without it), I figured this would resolve it. I’d planned on picking it up the next day, but I couldn’t see another way out of this. It was getting late, and it was still raining, causing all sorts of delays everywhere. The battery got down to 2%, only because I copied and wrote down the instructions on a piece of paper and used that to navigate through the buses and the streets.
That’s what it looks like. You punch in a six-character code (which I’d also thankfully copied down onto paper when the battery was at 3%), and a locker door pops open and inside is…
…salvation. Luckily, it came with a power cable. How ironic it would’ve been if all there had been was the battery. And it was 75% charged, too.
So there you have it. Who knew a book tour could resemble Mission:Impossible?
Tomorrow, I’m off to Los Angeles, where I’ll have a rental car through the weekend. I’m very much looking forward to that.
I had a lot of fun doing something kind of goofy — I visited various San Francisco locations I mentioned in my novel Love Love and posted photos and a snippet of the related text on Instagram. Check it out!
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I’m grateful for the September/October 2015 issue of Cornell Magazine, which highlighted Love Love in the Authors section.

You can also read about the other exciting books that my fellow Cornellians wrote here. Right above my novel is Lawrence H. Levy’s Second Street Station — I’ll be on a panel with him at the Cornell Club of Los Angeles’s event on 9/19.
The lovely folks at KoreAm Journal have reviewed Love Love, and it’s an incisive piece. Thank you, KoreAm.
Below is the first essay I ever wrote for KoreAm Journal, dating all the way back to March 2008. On the cover were Harold and Kumar, John Cho and Kal Penn, from their second movie.
I’m not mentioning this just for nostalgia’s sake — it’s because I just heard from the editor-in-chief that the magazine and the website has changed owners and is now facing an uncertain future. As of now, August/September 2015 is the final issue. I sure hope this is not the case — that they will find a way to keep going, but we all know how tough it is to run a magazine nowadays. I wish the editors and writers the best of luck. I’d like to especially thank Suevon Lee and Julie Ha, who polished my prose and shepherded my columns every step of the way.
My August/September column for KoreAm Journal is now available online. This one has to do with my second novel, Love Love, and how/why I ended up writing about pornography.
From time to time, at a slightly greater frequency than a visit by Halley’s Comet, people ask me what my second novel, Love Love, is about. I usually tell them it stars Korean American siblings in pre-midlife crisis mode. I also mention tennis, since the brother is an ex-professional tennis player. Then I say, hey, it’s about art, too, because the sister is a struggling painter.
At this point the person nods and waits because I’m not done.
“I also wrote about pornography,” I say. Although I mean to mention this without any added inflection or emotion, I usually find that my voice betrays me, so I end up with, “I also wrote about pornography?” Almost as if I’m asking for permission.
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The graphic you see above was one of the alternate covers that the brilliant artist, Jennifer Heuer, came up with. Kinda goes well with the post…
A hearty thank you to San Francisco Magazine for giving some love to Love Love:
The full text:
Get lost in an oversexed San Francisco
Sung J. Woo, author of the highly lauded Everything Asian, has a new novel on a slightly different subject. Love Love (Soft Skull Press) finds 40-year-old tennis coach Kevin Lee grappling with the discovery that not only was he adopted, but his biological parents were porn stars in ’70s San Francisco — a lot to take in for a man in the midst of a midlife crisis.
The portion of the bald head you see below my little snippet belongs to none other than Salman Rushdie! If that wasn’t amazing enough, I’m also sharing space with Jonathan Franzen’s Purity and Billy Joel. The entire page appears below.
The lovely folks at Book Riot’s All the Books! podcast mentioned Love Love in their weekly podcast. It’s about 29 minutes in and lasts about 20 seconds! 🙂 They also mention a whole bunch of other wonderful novels and nonfiction books, so give it a listen via iTunes or directly on their site.
The good folks at Publishers Weekly reviewed Love Love, and again, I’m relieved and thankful!
Woo’s poignant, engrossing follow up to 2009’s Everything Asian chronicles the lives of two adult siblings—responsible, organized Kevin Lee and his scattered younger sister, Judy—when a medical procedure surprisingly reveals that Kevin was adopted. After seeing how her father treated her dying mother, in addition to a lifetime of his withering disapproval, Judy is indifferent to the fact that her elderly dad now needs a new kidney. Kevin confronts him, then quits his job teaching tennis and goes to San Francisco on a quest to find out more about his birth parents. Both Kevin and Judy have endured recent divorces and miss their former spouses. Judy is attempting a relationship with erstwhile colleague Roger Nakamura, who seems to have a few secrets. After accepting an offer to stay in California with Claudia St. James, the eccentric mother of one of his precocious students, Kevin begins a physical relationship with her. Woo’s narrative takes serendipitous turns—he has a knack for making these twists seem organic, like things that would happen in life. Scenes recounting memories of family and lost love are also skillfully interspersed. (Sept.)
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You may have noticed that this is the third review. What happened to the second one? I skipped it because it isn’t available online yet. But it should be soon…
Since my Modern Love essay came out on Thursday, a few people have asked about the recently-completed second book. Here’s the pitch.
Love Love
by Sung J. Woo
A novel about art and athletics, family and adoption, remembrance and forgiveness – and Judy and Kevin, sister and brother.
Judy Lee’s life has not turned out the way she’d imagined. She’s divorced, she’s broke, and her dreams of being a painter have fallen by the wayside. Her co-worker Roger might be a member of the Yakuza, but he’s also the only person who’s asked her on a date in the last year.
Meanwhile, Kevin, an ex-professional tennis player, has decided to donate a kidney to their ailing father — until it turns out that he’s not a genetic match. His father reluctantly tells him he was adopted, but the only information Kevin has is a nude picture of his birth mother.
Told in alternating chapters from the points of view of Judy and Kevin, Love Love is a story about two people figuring out how to live, how to love, how to be their best selves amid the chaos of their lives.