Eat Everything Before You Die

A Chinaman in the Counterculture

Jeffery Paul Chan author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Washington Press

Published:1st Jul '04

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Eat Everything Before You Die cover

A first novel by one of the founding figures in Asian American studies

Set against the backdrop of America's wars in Asia and the assimilation of that experience - the refugees, the stereotypes, the food, this book features an ironic commentary on the identities the children of Chinese American immigrants concoct from their questionable histories, cultural practices, and survival strategies.

In this vibrant and original novel, Christopher Columbus Wong, orphan son of a Chinatown bachelor community, is trying to invent a family for himself while all around him American popular culture is reinventing itself with sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll. Christopher finds himself on a wild journey with his gay older brother, Peter, a pan-Pacific TV chef; the defrocked, deranged, and eroding ex-director of a Chinatown settlement house, Reverend Ted Candlewick; the sharp-eyed, conspiring matriarch Auntie Mary, the bridge between the conflicting values that make up this cultural stew; and Uncle Lincoln, a bachelor, short order cook, and, quite possibly, Christopher and Peter’s father. Further complicating Christopher’s voyage are his ex-wives: Winnie, a Hong Kong immigrant looking for a green card, and Melba, an American orphan of the counterculture.

Set against the backdrop of America’s wars in Asia and the assimilation of that experience—the refugees, the stereotypes, the food—Eat Everything Before You Die is an ironic commentary on the identities the children of Chinese American immigrants concoct from their questionable histories, cultural practices, and survival strategies.

Chan’s riotous story will appeal to general readers, particularly those interested in the Asian American experience, and will be of strong, enduring interest to students and scholars in Asian American Studies.

"A knotty dynamic tale..Chan writes with sumptuous eloquence about food, and the moments in which boundaries between sibling, lover, mother and father shift and break down are deeply moving."

* Publishers Weekly *

"A veritable banquet of images..This anguished and angry search for self will appeal to fans of literary fiction."

* Library Journal *

"Jeffery Paul Chan has clearly set out to write a decades-spanning epic about the immigration experience and the cultural permutations the Bay Area has gone through during the post-war era. And he boasts many of the tools and talents necessary to the task. He has a skeptical eye for human comedy, and a wanton eye for polymorphous sexual entanglements and jealousies. The San Francisco he portrays through his Chinatown lens couldn't be more vivid."

* The Seattle Times *

"What works best in this novel are the fascinating detail and the demands of narratives that intertwine like tendrils of creeping vines."

* Choi

ISBN: 9780295984360

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 413g

304 pages