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Native Speaker
$24.20About the Author
Chang-rae Lee is the author of On Such a Full Sea, finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, Native Speaker, winner of the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award for first fiction, A Gesture Life, Aloft, and The Surrendered, winner of the Dayton Peace Prize and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Selected by The New Yorker as one of the twenty best writers under forty, Chang-rae Lee teaches writing at Princeton University.
Reviews
Espionage acts as a metaphor for the uneasy relationship of Amerasians to American society in this eloquent, thought-provoking tale of a young Korean-American’s struggle to conjoin the fragments of his personality in culturally diverse New York City. Raised in a family and culture valuing careful control of emotions and appearances, narrator Henry Park, son of a successful Korean-American grocer, works as an undercover operative for a vaguely sinister private intelligence agency. He and his “American wife,” Lelia, are estranged, partly as a result of Henry’s stoical way of coping with the recent death of their young son. Henry is also having trouble at work, becoming emotionally attached to the people he should be investigating. Ruminating on his upbringing, he traces the path that has led to his present sorrow; as he infiltrates the staff of a popular Korean-American city councilman, he discovers the broader, societal context of the issues he has been grappling with personally. Writing in a precise yet freewheeling prose that takes us deep into Henry’s head, first-novelist Lee packs this story, whose intrigue is well measured and compelling, with insights into both current political events and timeless questions of love, culture, family bonds and identity. This is an auspicious debut for Riverhead Books, Putnam’s new division. First serial to Granta; QPB selection; audio rights to Brilliance; author tour. (Mar.)
Assigned to spy on a fellow Korean American, Henry Park faces an acute crisis of cultural conscience. LJ’s reviewer found Henry a “wonderful, honest creation.” (LJ 2/1/95)
“One of the year’s most provocative and deeply felt first novels…a searing portrait of the immigrant experience.” Vanity Fair”With echoes of Ralph Ellison, Chang-rae Lee’s extraordinary debut speaks for another kind of invisible man: the Asian immigrant in America…a revelatory work of fiction.” Vogue”The prose Lee writes is elliptical, riddling, poetic, often beautifully made.” The New Yorker”Deft, delicate…The book’s narrative is lyrical, its plot compelling…The novel’s interwoven plots and themes, its slew of singular characters, and Henry’s ongoing recollections and reflections are rich and enticing.” Boston Globe”A tender meditation on love, loss, and family.” The New York Times Book Review “One of the year”s most provocative and deeply felt first novels…a searing portrait of the immigrant experience.”—Vanity Fair”With echoes of Ralph Ellison, Chang-rae Lee”s extraordinary debut speaks for another kind of invisible man: the Asian immigrant in America…a revelatory work of fiction.”—Vogue”The prose Lee writes is elliptical, riddling, poetic, often beautifully made.”—The New Yorker”Deft, delicate…The book”s narrative is lyrical, its plot compelling…The novel”s interwoven plots and themes, its slew of singular characters, and Henry”s ongoing recollections and reflections are rich and enticing.”—Boston Globe”A tender meditation on love, loss, and family.”—The New York Times Book Review