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With her first novel, Free Food for Millionaires, Min Jin Lee has
won the praise of literary critics. Though 562 pages, the book is a true
page-turner, with a Korean-American protagonist and a compelling plot involving
the universal clash of cultures, adultery and class distinction.
The Yale and Georgetown-educated Lee gave up a career in corporate law
to follow her dream of becoming a writer -- a job that seemed too "luxurious"
to pursue when she was in her early 20s. She is self-effacing and has a
habit of referring to herself as "almost 40," although she doesn't even
turn 39 until later this year. Lee cited Tolstoy, Balzac, Flaubert and
the Bronte sisters as some of her favorites authors during a chat from
her New York home two weeks before her family's move to Japan.
Q. Free Food for Millionaires came
out around the time of the Virginia Tech tragedy and some reviewers used
the Korean-American connection (the shooter, Seung-Hui Cho, was originally
from South Korea) to introduce your book. Did that tick you off?
A. No, because I understood why they were
doing it and I think most of the writers made the comparison in a very
responsible way. People always want to understand something in a narrative
and they want to relate somehow. How do you relate to a Korean-American
author who no one has ever heard of before? The majority of Americans don't
think Korean Americans are going to pull out a gun and start shooting.
If anything, the stereotype is that we are very hard working and overachievers.
Korean Americans aren't well represented in the mainstream media, and I
think one of our responsibilities as minority writers is not to just complain
about under-representation, but to produce as much content as possible
and to share as much as we can.
Q. Casey Han, the book's protagonist, went
to an Ivy League school, and has immigrant parents who work nonstop. How
much is she actually you?
A. Not as much as people would think. We're
both Korean American and we both went to schools in the East. But I had
to do a lot of research to get into her head. She's quite the gal about
town. I met my husband when I was 22 and got married when I was 24. I didn't
really know anything about dating! I had to ask people a lot of dopey questions
about what you do during a breakup -- things that most 20-year-olds have
gone through multiple times. I definitely have a more optimistic view of
men than Casey does.
Q. You have not had overnight success.
How did you deal with rejection before this book got published?
A. Rejection is horrible. Do you get over
it? Sure. But it's still horrible because you took a risk and created this
thing and then people say they don't like it. It's like hearing that they
don't like you. It took me 12 years to publish my first novel. My first
one was formally rejected. I couldn't finish my second one because I wasn't
able to complete the research or travel for my book. By then, I was a mother
and a housewife and had to take care of my family. Then I wrote this over
a period of five years and it sold. I didn't even have an agent until last
year.
Q. Do you ever think about tweaking that
first book and trying to get it sold?
A. No. I look at myself and what I wrote
when I was 26 and I think it's amazing I wrote that book. But I don't think
it's worth anyone's money to buy that first book. Asking someone to pay
$24.95 for a book that isn't very good isn't just a waste of their money,
but their time. When I write a book, I should be able to deliver satisfaction.
I have great demands on the books I buy, so why shouldn't the people who
buy anything I write?
Q: What's next for you professionally and
personally?
A: By the time this article comes out,
I'll have moved to Japan for a couple of years. We're moving for my husband's
job, but it has also worked out really well for my next book. I finally
have the opportunity to fully research that second novel I couldn't finish
before. It's called Pachinko [a combination between a pinball game
and a slot machine]. The ethnic Korean community manufactures the games
in Japan. I wrote a short story about it ["Motherland"] that was excerpted
in the Missouri Review and won the Peden Prize. And it worked out that
I finally get to finish it. I'm a little nervous about moving 'cause I
don't speak any Japanese. But our son is so excited and really looking
forward to it. Hopefully his enthusiasm will rub off and I'll lose some
of my apprehension. |