Marin Independent Journal

Finding his voice

How a Chinese restaurant taught a queer writer everything he knows

- By Jireh Deng

It was the 1980s, and Detroit was grappling with civil unrest, the AIDS crisis, crack cocaine and sky-high racial tensions. Curtis Chin was only a child when a close family friend, Vincent Chin, was murdered by racist autoworker­s. By the time Chin turned 18, the violence of his hometown had ended the lives of five people he knew.

But Chin's family restaurant, Chung's, was an oasis on Cass Corridor where everyone was welcome to feast on American Chinese food: drug dealers, sex workers, gay men, touring Broadway performers, even Detroit's first Black mayor. At its peak, Chung's was selling 4,000 egg rolls a week.

“We were the oldest surviving Chinese restaurant” in Detroit, Chin said in an interview last month on the release of his new memoir, “Everything I Learned, I Learned in a Chinese Restaurant.” His parents, who didn't graduate college, encouraged Chin and his siblings to learn from everyone who walked through their doors. “Anytime my dad met someone who had a cool career … he'd call all six of us over and we'd run over and barrage [them] with all these questions.”

Three generation­s of Chins faithfully stewarded the establishm­ent from its start in 1940 until the restaurant officially closed in 2000. Without a restaurant to pass down, Chin began writing stories to share with his nieces and nephews about their family history — stories that became his memoir. In bite-sized chapters listed as menu items, he examines his upbringing as a queer Chinese American kid learning to find his place.

It wasn't as easy as it looks now. Chin, 55, worked for years as a writer and community storytelle­r, becoming the first head of the Asian American Writers Workshop, advising the Democratic Party on outreach and making feature films and documentar­ies. But It took him a decade to find a home for a book he had written himself.

`Different memoir'

It was “a different memoir” at first, Chin explained, “focused on my middle-school years being a kid. It was just crazy stories about my grandmothe­r and my grandfathe­r who ran the Chinese mafia.”

It was the COVID pandemic that nudged the book in a different direction. As anti-Asian hate crimes surged and the murder of George

Floyd sparked a nationwide movement against racism and police violence, Chin pivoted toward contempora­ry issues and the memoir suddenly became timely. After a three-week bidding war, Little, Brown snapped it up in a six-figure contract.

“I hope the book opens up a conversati­on and brings people together,” said Chin. “As I've jokingly said before, the pitch is: Come for the egg rolls, but stay for the talk on racism.”

Chin was a staunch Republican in high school and even college before migrating toward the Democratic Party. He later went on to advise the Obama campaign on Asian American issues. He explains his prior political affiliatio­n as part of his own struggles to assimilate.

“One of the racist stereotype­s against Asian Americans is that we're not very loyal to the U.S., right?” said Chin. “To fit in, I tried to go to the extreme. So I tried to out-patriot my classmates.”

Chin might seem like a late literary bloomer, but those who have benefited from his activism aren't surprised by his latest turn. Jeff Kim, Chin's partner of more than three decades, has seen his husband constantly advocating for Asian American stories throughout his career.

“He's got this network of goodwill,” Kim said. It goes all the way back to Michigan State University, where Chin studied poetry before moving to New York City and co-founding the AAWW in 1991. That group provided a safe space for AAPI writers in New York City, Kim explained, at a time when racist and fetishizin­g depictions of Asians were still prevalent in the arts.

When Chin followed Kim to L.A. in the late 1990s, he couldn't find a nonprofit arts position, so he pivoted to writing for network and cable television. Eventually he made documentar­ies focused on the legacy of Asian American figures; his most recent film, “Dear Corky,” follows the work of Asian American community photograph­er Corky Lee. And he had a producing credit on the 2008 documentar­y “Vincent Who?,” which brought renewed awareness of the murder of his friend decades ago.

In the spotlight

Now, after helping launch so many careers, it's Chin's turn in the spotlight.

The memoir feels like less of a career shift than an expansion of his lifelong work. “The book is perennial or universal,” he said, “because of some of the issues that we face as Asian Americans … the idea of us being foreigners, the idea of us being dirty, the idea of us being unassimila­ble — these are all things that have followed us since the moment our ancestors first arrived, they haven't changed. The only thing that

 ?? LITTLE, BROWN & CO. VIA AP ??
LITTLE, BROWN & CO. VIA AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States