Tag Archives: Ed Lin

One Red Bastard by Ed Lin + Author Interview

Ed Lin is not Robert Chow, his fictional alter ego who has starred in three of Lin’s four books. If nothing else, Lin is just too young, too happy, and too funny to resemble the Vietnam War veteran-turned Chinatown, New York City cop. The other major difference? Lin got the girl – charmer that he is – while Chow is probably going to remain single for a good long time.

This month, Chow faces his third grisly Chinatown mystery in One Red Bastard. Introduced in Lin’s second novel, This Is a Bust, Chow is the lone Chinese American policeman in 1976 New York Chinatown. Having returned from Vietnam with secrets too horrific for words, Chow can only face the inhumane aftermath of war by drowning himself in booze. While his higher-ups think he’s fit only for ribbon-cutting ceremonies and other such photo ops, Chow manages to solve his first Chinatown murder solo – it helps to speak the language! – and picks up a few true friends along the way.

Personal demons aside, the sobered-up Chow is settling well into his tough-guy-on-the-outside-caring-citizen-on-the-inside leading man role in his second title, Snakes Can’t Run. Still the token Chinese American cop in New York, Chow has finally graduated to full-time detective. When two corpses turn up under the Brooklyn Bridge, Chow’s investigation eventually leads him to chasing down immigrant smugglers – otherwise known as snakeheads – who traffic in human flesh.

Now in One Red Bastard, Chow is finally hoping to earn his gold badge, regardless of the endless obstacles some of his superiors throw his way. Chairman Mao is dead, his fourth wife and widow’s in jail, and their only daughter wants to seek asylum in the good ‘ol U.S.A. Mao’s grown-up baby girl (who hardly knew big Daddy) sends an official representative to check out her immigration prospects. Meanwhile, Chinatown is divided on what Li Na’s defection might mean to the already politically factionalized Chinese American community – especially between the Mao-supporting Communists and the Taiwan-bolstering Kuomintang.

Chow’s girlfriend, who’s working hard to establish her career as a journalist, scores the one interview with the Chinese official. Of course, he wants to meet over dinner, in his swanky Plaza Hotel room – but he swears they won’t be alone, as he has bodyguards galore. But in the wee hours, his bludgeoned body ends up dumped in Chinatown, and – surprise, surprise! – the police insist Chow’s girlfriend was the last person to see the foreign official alive…

Okay, so spill it… Which side are you on? KMT? Commies?
I never pick sides! Well, shoot, let’s remember that the KMT and Commies have been really good friends and terrible enemies at times over the years. It was a coalition of Chinese nationalists, Republicans, and Socialists that brought down the last “Chinese” dynasty, the Qing, in 1912. I put that in quotations because it was a foreign dynasty founded and run by the evil Jurchens [an ethnic group who inhabited present-day Northeast China, who adopted the name "Manchu" in the 17th century] who colonized China and treated ethnic Chinese people like second-class citizens over the 250 years-plus of their reign. Members of my family have been a part of the Commies, the KMT, and the native Taiwanese movements. It always helps to have more than one membership card in your wallet. Even better to belong to a few secret societies, too. You never know when the wind’s gonna change. Look at what great buddies the KMT and Commies are right now, agreeing about how Taiwan is an inalienable part of China. Phooey!

And how did you choose Mao’s youngest daughter – and only child with his infamous fourth wife, Jiang Qing, Ms. One-Quarter-of-the-Gang-of-Four – as your focal point for Red?
People always talk about how cunning Mao was, but what about that Jiang Qing? She was an actress early on, and you can never trust them. They lie. Like Mao, Jiang changed names and traded up with partners and spouses when it was expedient. I wondered what life has been like for Li Na, the daughter of Mao and Jiang, who spent her early life hidden away with distant relatives. (She is 71 or 72 now.) She has lived a quiet life, and only a handful of old photographs exist, which is a little strange for the sole offspring of two of the most infamous people in modern Chinese history. I’ll bet that Li wanted to get away from it all at some point. She would have wanted to give America a shot since it was the most fascinating country to Chinese people after Nixon’s visit.

Does this upcoming trip to Taiwan have anything to do with your affiliations?
Sorta. I haven’t been to the island in years and I want to see what’s up. I’m going hardcore Taipei, since I’ve never really been to that city. My father’s family is from central Taiwan, a real benshengren stronghold. They are Taiwanese who originally came over from China centuries ago, as opposed to the Johnnies-come-lately waishengren who washed up on Taiwan at the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949. There have been all kinds of tensions over the years between the benshenren and waishengren, not to mention the Hakka people and indigenous Taiwanese. My trip is a vacation in the disguise of research for another book. On a different note, I discovered that there is a university in Beijing that has an Asian American literary department. I’m going there in June to deliver the keynote address for their conference.

I don’t want to allow any spoilers, but who’s the “one red bastard”? Uhh… lots and lots of “red” bad guys, but you’re sort of leading your readers astray on purpose, aren’t you? ‘Fess up!
It’s a mix of “red” herrings with the literal and figurative meanings of “bastard.” I love to trick people. It makes me feel smart. [... click here for more]

Author interview: Feature: “An Interview with Ed Lin,” Bookslut.com, May 2012

Readers: Adult

Published: 2012

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Snakes Can’t Run: A Mystery by Ed Lin

Timing is everything, right? Last weekend, I had our teenage daughter and a friend of hers wandering NYC, and we happened to do the fabulous, downloadable Soundwalk/Chinatown walking tour narrated by Chinatown native Jami Gong – all three of us were attached to one iPod via three-way splitter, trying to navigate around others’ umbrellas in the pouring rain. I had done the walking tour years before … and wasn’t too surprised that a few things had changed, but the wander through the back alleys and secret corners was still just as entertainingly eye-opening. Would recommend it highly to anyone and everyone.

So how fortuitous that I also happened to be reading Snakes Can’t Run, in which Ed Lin takes readers back to 1976 Chinatown to solve another mystery with his tough-guy-on-the-outside-caring-citizen-on-the-inside leading man, Robert Chow. Newly inspired, I hurried back to finish Lin’s third novel, feeling like I was truly just there among the quickly-turning pages.

As the token Chinese American cop in New York, Chow – who made his debut in Lin’s second novel, This Is a Bust – has finally gone from Chinatown ribbon-cutting ceremonies to fulltime detective. He’s still fighting his personal demons: memories of death and destruction as a Vietnam War vet – something he shares with his NYPD partner Vandyne – not to mention his not-so-long-ago alcoholic binges from which he’s still recovering.

When two corpses turn up under the Brooklyn Bridge, Chow’s investigation eventually leads him to chasing down illegal immigrant smugglers, otherwise known as snakeheads who traffic in human flesh. In between, he listens to his partner’s marital woes, deals with his over-demanding mother, helps his erudite girlfriend escape a lifelong Chinatown career, and tries desperately to keep his childhood friend and Vietnam vet Don from completely losing what little is left of his sanity. But the American-born Chow’s greatest challenge is in facing his own family’s troubling illegal immigrant past.

Chow and Vandyne team up with a San Francisco import, a fellow Chinese American detective, who makes California sound like Asian American nirvana … but even if you can take a man out of Chinatown, Chow proves you can’t really take Chinatown out of that man, especially a Chinatown cop. We’ll surely be looking forward to Chow’s next adventures!

P.S. Patrick Radden Keefe’s The Snakehead makes for a fabulous nonfiction companion title, about one of the most notorious, worldwide snakehead operations in recent history.

Readers: Adult

Published: 2010

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This Is a Bust by Ed Lin

this-is-a-bustWhile Robert Chow’s life might be a bust, this second novel for the talented Lin turns out to be quite the page-turner. As the token Chinese policeman in 1976 New York Chinatown, Chow is also an all-American Vietnam vet, barely dealing with the inhumane aftermath of war by drowning himself in booze. While his higher-ups think he’s fit only for ribbon-cutting ceremonies and other photo ops, Chow manages to solve a Chinatown murder solo – it helps to speak the language! – and picks up a few true friends along the way.

Review: “In Celebration of Asian Pacific American Month: A Survey of New & Notable Books,” The Bloomsbury Review, May/June 2008

Readers: Adult

Published: 2007

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Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, Chinese American