Book Club: Charles Yu on dead ends, self-doubt and Kung Fu
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Charles Yu, a corporate attorney turned novelist and television writer, struggled for five years trying to turn his perceptions of cultural bias into a book.
His epiphany came one night while walking his dog. Thatâs when he heard the novelâs opening lines in his head: âEver since you were a boy, youâve dreamt of being Kung Fu Guy. You are not Kung Fu Guy.â
He recalls thinking, âNow I can hear the voice of the character.â
Yu pushed through the false starts, dead ends and self-doubt to publish âInterior Chinatown,â a satirical novel about how Hollywood and society trap Asian Americans in stereotypical roles. He won the National Book Award for fiction in November.
On Thursday Yu joins book club readers for a conversation with Times film critic Justin Chang. The book talk starts at 7 p.m., and you can sign up on Eventbrite.
âInterior Chinatownâ is the fourth book for Yu, who juggles writing fiction with writing for television. His credits include the HBO series âWestworld.â
A lawyer by training, he started writing in his spare time and says he endured scores of rejections before breaking through in 2006 with a collection of short stories, âThird Class Superhero.â
When heâs writing a novel, he says he doesnât bother with an outline. He works on a laptop but switches to paper when he feels stuck, scribbling in journals at home or in coffee shops.
âIâve learned to be more comfortable just being in the mess,â he says. âI have no idea of where Iâm going with this. Thatâs how I work.â
Yuâs top 10
Ahead of his book club visit, Charles Yu shared some of his favorite reads and how he survived the last year.
Last book that kept me up at night: âGreen Islandâ by Shawna Yang Ryan.
Book I most enjoy rereading: âThe Mezzanineâ by Nicholson Baker.
Favorite book to read with my kids: The dictionary. Also, for my son, anything by Gene Luen Yang. My daughter and I have started to read books about politics.
TV show that got me through the pandemic: âLodge 49.â
Best movie Iâve watched lately: âUnderground Railroadâ on Amazon. I know technically itâs a limited series, but it is as cinematic as any movie.
Favorite music right now: âDynamiteâ by BTS. I canât stop listening to it.
My theme song: âWhere Is My Mindâ by the Pixies. It is a perfect song and a really good question that I ask myself all the time.
Something that might surprise people about me: I am an accomplished gymnast. (I am not. But wouldnât that be surprising?)
Something I discovered about myself this past year: I kind of miss driving.
Next project: A few things I am excited to be working on but canât talk about. But one that I am allowed to talk about is adapting âInterior Chinatownâ for Hulu!
Keep reading
Shakespeare in the streets: Makeda Easter profiles teacher Melanie Andrews, who shared her lifelong devotion to the Bard with students over a 30-year career in South L.A. high schools. Andrews is artistic director of the Inner City Shakespeare Ensemble, a community theater company that pairs young performers with professional mentors. âThe arts is an underground way to build people, to allow them to tell their stories,â she says.
From wild idea to proposed bill: L.A. author David Kipen talks about the inspiration for his modern-day Federal Writers Project, an idea that came to him at dawn.
Back to the library: The Los Angeles Public Library is reopening 38 branches across the city. A gradual rollout of services will initially include quick browsing, computer access, checking out materials inside libraries and Library To Go outdoor pickup.
What makes a home: Author Susan Straight writes about two novels â Claire Fullerâs âUnsettled Groundâ and Joan Silberâs âSecrets of Happinessâ â that helped her rethink family and home in a year of loss.
Vulcans donât come easy: Charlie Jane Anders, author of âThe City in the Middle of the Nightâ and other books, pens an interesting essay on the pitfalls of inventing an alien civilization. âMaking a memorable alien is a balancing act,â she says. âYou have to give them something audiences can pin on them so they stick out in everyoneâs mind, but you donât want to end up with a planet made up entirely of mining engineers.â
Whatâs the ultimate travel book?
For Times travel writer Christopher Reynolds, thereâs no contest. âI love Mark Twainâs âThe Innocents Abroadâ because it pokes wonderful holes in the American habit of worshiping all European culture â and in the long-standing European art of monetizing history,â he says. âIt pokes holes in everyone, really, and casts a shrewd eye on just about all of the landmarks we continue to revere in Europe and the Middle East. Twain wrote it in his early 30s, before heâd won big fame with any of his fiction.
âI keep doubling back to Twain. In 1993, following a bunch of American college students to Europe, I wrote about how they did and didnât echo Twainâs fellow travelers in âInnocents Abroad.â In 2010, I got to visit Twainâs hometown, Hannibal, Mo., and interview the folks who run the Twain museum there. And four years ago I got to follow Twainâs years in Nevada and California, including the spot where he nearly started a forest fire near Lake Tahoe. Basically, every time I see a chance to follow Twain somewhere, I take it.â
This week, Chris compiled this inspiring collection for 40 California road trips.
Book clubbers, where are you traveling this summer â and what books will you bring along? Share your comments in an email to [email protected].
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