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 Frank Chin is
 Frank Chin is
 My Favorite Azn Am Book of All Time
 My Favorite Azn Am Book of All Time
 My Favorite Book by Frank Chin
 My Favorite Book by Frank Chin
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 A book I can personally relate too
 A book I can personally relate too
 A Pleasure To Read
 A Pleasure To Read
 Yes
 Yes
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 Bullet-Proof Buddhists: The Real Deal
 Bullet-Proof Buddhists: The Real Deal
 Frank Chin combs the landscape of Chinese American culture
 Frank Chin combs the landscape of Chinese American culture
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 Meet Frank Chin, The Writer
 Meet Frank Chin, The Writer
 Entertaining right to the end
 Entertaining right to the endAnd if you liked Maxine Hong Kingston's book The Woman Warrior, and know how much Mr. Chin doesn't like the Mulan spoof Kingston put it, then read the Afterword to this volume (this one alone is a laugh and a half).

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 The editors say
 The editors sayFinally, an anthology of Asian Americans who've stayed unassimilated in a white supremacist society. Thus angering white men (like Earl Derr Biggers and Sax Rohmer) to denigrate Asians into gross depictions like Charlie Chan, Fu Manchu, Suzie Wong, etc. Much debate and controversy came from this book, which should cause you to buy it. Some Asians who have sold out to the stereotypes (Asians like Leong Gor Yun, C.Y. Lee, Yung Wing, Lin Yutang, Calvin Lee, Betty Lee Sung) are doing everything they can to keep this book from being purchased (see my review of the June 1974 Aiiieeeee! edition). Funny, it seems that has done nothing more but up the sales of this important book. In failing to do so, these same Asians have tried to ruin the reputation of these editors. Either way, this book stands strong and unrefuted.

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 It's a matter of history.
 It's a matter of history.
 Loved this book!
 Loved this book!
 Are you a fan of...
 Are you a fan of...

 A Tiny Revolution
 A Tiny RevolutionAlthough it's true that his plays can sometimes be crude and sophomoric, there are passages in "The Chickencoop Chinaman" that foretell Mr. Chin's eventual success as an essayist and novelist - particularly in wistful and mournful monologues from the protagonist, in direct address to the audience, about childhood heroes (believing, for example, that The Lone Ranger was certainly Chinese behind that mask), and other dynamic movements that capture, and inspire, a sense of the spirit and discovery that must have permeated the burgeoning Asian-American movement of the 1970s.
"The Year Of The Dragon", conversely, is more typically a real "play", structurally conforming with classic American modes of expression. It is a play that takes as its root a thematic question that remains a frequent one with Mr. Chin, in his subsequent and recent novels and essays: the personal, individual reconciliation of Asian heritage with American citizenship (or, as he refers to it, "the identity crisis"). While this is a theme very common in Asian-American literature since 1976, the most interesting thing here is to note the radical difference between the way Mr. Chin represents this issue from, say, the more mainstream work of Amy Tan - in Mr. Chin's view of the world, this "identity crisis" is neither a tragedy, a struggle, nor some curse that is to inevitably befall anyone who dares try being Asian and American at one and the same time; rather, according to Chin, this "identity crisis" is a BIG FAT LIE.
When I first came across this collection, I was a college student, and can you imagine the massive revolution that took place in my mind, through the simple act of reading that assertion? That the Asian-American identity crisis is an invention borne not of the Asian or Asian-American mind, but the institutional white American mind? That being Asian and being American were completely reconcilable states of being, simply by the individual process of a person being cool with that?
It was a revolution to me when I first read it, and one that I sadly feel has been forgotten (or otherwise ignored, toward the end goal of exploiting the romantic, foreign view of a "stranger in a strange land" that marks much of the most popular Asian-American literature of the day). I have a hunch it would be a revolution today, if only people were to come along and listen.
That being said, I do wonder if Mr. Chin is left irreversibly bitter over all of this - if I'm correct, he never wrote another play. And while his essays are excellent, I wonder if he is resigned to being the crazy Uncle of APA literature, always on the fringe and perceived forever as he likes to think of himself, a "literary gangster". It's not a bad gig, for sure, but I can't help wish he approached his work now with the same inventive spirit and sense of abandon as he did when these plays were written. I suppose that's a lot to ask an old man.
 Frank Chin is the first Asian American, brave enough,
 Frank Chin is the first Asian American, brave enough,
 This Is The 1st Azn Am Play to be Professionally Produced...
 This Is The 1st Azn Am Play to be Professionally Produced...
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 This Book Is A Great Introduction of The Author Frank Chin
 This Book Is A Great Introduction of The Author Frank Chin
 What an enjoyable read!
 What an enjoyable read!
 The right balance of a wonderful story and engaging prose.
 The right balance of a wonderful story and engaging prose.
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 Deft, unsentimental treatment of a difficult subject
 Deft, unsentimental treatment of a difficult subjectBeyond the compelling subject matter, his prose is poetic, visceral, gently engaging of all the senses. The dialogue is evocative without being bogged down by elaborate dialect. Okada has a talent for a natural, flowing narrative voice that almost dreamily leads the reader through complex emotional issues. I cannot understand reviewers who criticized this book as "preachy" - in fact, Okada seems to go out of his way to avoid expressing personal opinions on how the reader should feel about the events described. Never did I feel he was driving home a moral lesson or other.
The framework of the discovery of the novel - as explained in the forward by Frank Chin - is another tragic and dramatic story in itself. Chin's white-hot rage at the loss of Okada's research and papers fairly bristles off the page. The forward is a passionate essay about the birth of Asian-American literature and is worth a read on its own.
 Loyalty and Identity for Japanese Americans during WWII
 Loyalty and Identity for Japanese Americans during WWII
 Asian American literature at its best
 Asian American literature at its bestThis story takes place during World War II: a terrible time for Japanese Americans, the subjects of this story. It shares the difficulty that a young Japanese American man named Ichiro faced when choosing not to fight for America, the country he always called his home. The two years in prison he spent for rejecting the draft was not nearly as painful as the difficulty of defining himself as an American. America is the country that, on one hand, is his home by birth and residence and, on the other hand, has punished his ethnic group via internment based solely on a distant place of origin. On his journey to find his identity he comes upon many characters, both Japanese Americans and others, that come to shape his perception of what it means to be an American. "No-No Boy" is a magnificent piece of Asian American literature.

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 first anthology of asian american writing
 first anthology of asian american writing
 Ground Breaking!
 Ground Breaking!
 Ground Breaking!
 Ground Breaking!