Tag Archives: Rattawut Lapcharoensap

Sightseeing by Rattawut Lapcharoensap + Author Interview

SightseeingClint Eastwood, Summer Love, and Cockfighting

The good news first: Rattawut Lapcharoensap’s family in Thailand is all fine; the tsunami thankfully did not harm them. The other good news: His collection of short stories, Sightseeing, which debuts this week, is absolutely superb.

Born in Chicago, raised in Bangkok, and currently living in Norwich, England on a fellowship at the University of East Anglia, the 25-year-old Lapcharoensap (called “A” by everyone except “unfriendly bureaucratic institutions,” he says) vividly captures a slice of life for each of his memorable characters. From a young hapa boy (who keeps a pet pig named Clint Eastwood!) who believes he’s in love with a summer tourist, to an old American codger transplanted to Thailand to live out his final years with his son and Thai daughter-in-law, to a young girl on the brink of adulthood who witnesses her father’s humiliating downfall through gambling, Lapcharoensap’s characters leave a lingering memory even as his words come to an end.

AsianWeek: Where did the inspiration for Sightseeing come from? I understand that these stories are not at all autobiographical …
Rattawut Lapcharoensap: Many of the stories were partly born out of a certain frustration with depictions of Thais and Thailand in contemporary English-language literature. The Thailand I often encountered seemed a far cry from the Thailand I thought I knew, the Thailand I loved.

Whether or not my stories are ‘autobiographical’ depends upon what is meant by the term. If ‘autobiography’ means an account of a life’s events, then this is not an autobiographical book. The events of my life have not been transposed onto the page. Nevertheless, I don’t think there’s such a thing as a piece of writing uninformed by an author’s life experiences. You can’t write about people unless you’ve known a few. My characters often come to me by way of their voices – a line of dialogue, snippet of conversation, the way they may or may not say something.

AW: How has your family reacted to your book?
RL: My family’s reaction to the book has been one of pride and a certain measure of relief, I think. I was unemployed in the winter of 2004 and had decided to finish my book on the small bit of money that I had set aside over the years. There was quite a bit of skepticism about my decision at the time, not only from my family but also, of course, from myself; watching my bank account dwindle that winter made me feel pretty foolish, particularly when the writing wasn’t going as planned. Needless to say, when the book was accepted for publication in April, there was joy, but there was also, I think, an enormous amount of relief. I felt – and continue to feel – inordinately lucky: [that] I should be able to make my living doing something I love. … [click here for more]

of my life have not been transposed onto the page.
Nevertheless, I don’t think there’s such a thing as a
piece of writing uninformed by an author’s life
experiences. You can’t write about people unless
you’ve known a few. My characters often come to me
by way of their voices — a line of dialogue, snippet
of conversation, the way they may or may not say
something.
HOW HAS YOUR FAMILY REACTED TO YOUR
BOOK?
RL: My family’s reaction to the book has been one of
pride and a certain measure of relief, I think. I was
unemployed in the winter of 2004 and had decided
to finish my book on the small bit of money that I had
set aside over the years. There was quite a bit of
skepticism about my decision at the time, not only
from my family but also, of course, from myself;
watching my bank account dwindle that winter made
me feel pretty foolish, particularly when the writing
wasn’t going as planned. Needless to say, when the
book was accepted for publication in April, there was
joy, but there was also, I think, an enormous amount
of relief. I felt — and continue to feel — inordinately
lucky: [that] I should be able to make my living doing
something I love.

Author interview: “Clint Eastwood, Summer Love, and Cockfighting,” AsianWeek, January 21, 2005

Readers: Adult

Published: 2004

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Filed under ...Author Interview/Profile, ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, .Short Stories, Thai, Thai American