Tuesday, January 11, 2022

REVIEW: "The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu" by Tom Lin

The history of Chinese immigrants in the 19th century is--at best--an acknowledged fact of hardship and mistreatment. It happened, but the individual names and stories of the immigrants who came are not well-documented and likely lost. They exist as anonymous, gaunt faces in old, faded photographs. It may be too early to call it a trend, but Tom Lin's "The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu" is the second book I've read in the last two years (C. Pam Zhang's "How Much of These Hills is Gold" being the other) that seeks to establish a new western mythology centered on the Chinese experience, retroactively granting name and stories to these early immigrants and claiming a place in the great American story. It's a refreshing and needed twist to the western story that I hope grows and develops further to encompass other groups whose stories have been untold.

Lin's cinematic novel is a taut and brutal story of vengeance, a trope familiar from countless movies and books. Ming Tsu is a deadly assassin, an orphan who was raised and trained by a white man to be a killer, who we join as his quest for revenge is already in progress. Before the novel even starts he has already killed one of the men on his kill list and on his way to find the second. Though we know the names of those who had done him wrong, we don't really know much about his targets nor do we know really anything about Ming himself. He's the stereotypical taciturn, mysterious sharpshooter apart from the fact that he's Chinese. Lin withholds a lot from the reader, which is probably by design, as he expects us to be familiar with western tropes and formulas, but I think he withholds too much. We just take for granted that his quest is righteous and his victims deserve all that they get. That asks a lot. Ming Tsu is an anti-hero by design, but based on the bits of backstory we glean, I'm not so sure he's a decent man. We don't know anything about his beloved Ada, the wife who was taken away from him, and he is now seeking to reunite with. Apart from a brief dream about her, we don't know what kind of woman she is and whether she even wants to be with Ming. Lin expects too much of the reader to completely accept at face value that Ming is justified in his quest and that he is deserving of the help and luck he gets throughout the story.

What's also interesting in the novel is Lin's use of magic realism. For much of the novel, Ming joins up with an old Chinese man called simply "the Prophet" who can tell when a person will die but also has no memory. He doesn't remember, for example, meeting Ming before. The Prophet is a fascinating, enigmatic character who embodies and speaks of the book's theme of memory and history as a function not of the mind but of the physical body. To borrow the title of a popular current book, the body keeps the score.

For most of the book Ming and the Prophet join in with a traveling sideshow, ostensibly as their bodyguard to get them to Reno. The sideshow is comprised of several characters who all have literal gifts. They don't do illusions. Hazel, a woman Ming develops a relationship with, can set herself on fire, Hunter, a young deaf boy and an orphan like Ming, can speak into people's minds. There is also a tattooed Pacific Islander who can make himself look like the person he is staring at. Even the stagehands have talents. A Navajo man has the convenient ability to make people forget, which saves Ming a couple of times. The book is at its best here as it provides an opportunity to see Ming interact with other people and learn more about him. It gives the book palpable purpose which is missing from Ming's central goal. However, when Ming's time with the troupe ends, it just ends. Ming doesn't seem changed by the relationships he had with the troupe and these vividly drawn characters just go away as if they were merely used for color. It's a jarring transition. Through the end of the novel Ming is alone and the novel sags until the climactic face-off, which is as excitingly depicted as it is preposterous.

My biggest problem with Lin's novel is that Ming is a cipher throughout. Yes, we learn a little about him, but he moves through the story and landscape as a single-minded automaton who is seemingly invincible. The final shootout has him facing off against ten men and he emerges unharmed. He's the Terminator with less emotional development. It's not clear to me if Lin intends for us to empathize at all with Ming or if he is merely a vessel for Lin in an exercise to emulate Cormac McCarthy's view of humanity.

What is strong and ultimately saves "The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu" is the crisp and evocative writing of Lin. He has talent to spare. There are some beautiful passages throughout describing the western landscape and Lin carries a consistent voice throughout. Early on I used "cinematic" to describe the book because Lin truly creates a clear image in the reader's mind of the world and people we are encountering. And I feel that a film of the novel would perhaps improve on the flaws I feel the novel has as reading about a stoic character is different than watching a very good actor embody stoicism. Visual images also are economical in filling in back story than what Lin does here. I also admired and was haunted by Lin's discourse on history and memory. Even if history isn't written down and remembered, it still persists in our bodies and in the physical landscape.

After finishing the novel I was surprised to find out that Tom Lin is only 24 years old. The novel reads like it was written by an older individual. Clearly Lin has talent to spare and I can't wait to read what he does next. "The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu" is an imperfect story, but what is apparent is the skill and talent behind it.

Sunday, February 14, 2021

Toni Morrison's "Song of Solomon"

 It took me a while to get into Toni Morrison's "Song of Solomon," not until the first part ended and the quest of Part II gets going. I'll admit that I fell asleep a couple of times with the book on my chest, but it didn't help that I was reading late at night. It also didn't help that the first part tracks the growth and maturity--or rather the lack of maturity--of the protagonist, Milkman Dead, who is a haughty, selfish and unremarkable man-child. The name Milkman is indicative of this. It's not his profession but rather it's a reflection of a man who has not set aside childish things. He gets the name when a nosy townsperson spies on him suckling from his mother's breast at an age when most children would not be. The nickname sticks and the book tracks his "growth" as a ne'er-do-well only son of the most prosperous man in town.

What Morrison does in the first half of the book is lay the foundation for the quest Milkman embarks on in the second half. Milkman's Odyssey, complete with an encounter with an old crone named Circe, provides him an opportunity to grow and learn. Like most quests, what he's seeking turns out to be less valuable than what he actually discovers. Here Morrison unwinds the mysteries and myths she introduced in the novel's first half and the themes of identity, masculinity and the weight of the past come into focus. 

As a reader, I'm guilty of wanting to empathize with a novel's protagonist. Initially, I found it hard to empathize with Milkman and I dreaded thinking that this was a book I was not going to like. But as I read on, I realized that my initial disinterest and dislike of Milkman was actually due to my deep identification with his complacency, selfishness and lack of connection to his family. Milkman awakens during his quest and finds within him the ability to connect with his family and their past, his community, his race, his masculinity and even with those who wish to do him harm. Understanding where you came from, Morrison argues, is integral in knowing one's self. As Milkman journeys deeper into his family's history, the more he comes to understand himself and his desires.

One other thing I notice and love about Morrison's books is that they decentralize white people. Her stories leave them and their influence in the periphery. They are there, but the fates and destinies of her characters are not dictated by their presence. Reading Morrison is to read about race beyond what we commonly think of when, to paraphrase the title of a popular book about the matter, we want to talk about race. Morrison is not dismissing white people from the discussion but rather focuses on the lives and desires of black people. Her novels can function as accounts of black lives that have mostly gone unexamined or untold. I want to describe it as refreshing, but the way Morrison does it feels so natural that you wonder why it's not done more often. 

Morrison's books are not easy reads. They are not very demanding, but they do demand something from readers: patience. Give "Song of Solomon" time and the reader's patience is rewarded. 

Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Welcome!

 I had a blog for a few years. It's actually still active, but I haven't posted anything there since 2013. I considered just rebooting it but ultimately decided that a fresh start is in order.

So what will this blog be about?

Honestly, I don't know. I've been reading a lot lately due to the pandemic and I figured this would be a good place to post reviews, thoughts and ruminations on what I just read. I find that books linger longer in my mind if I write about them rather than put them away after I'm done. Writing about the book reinforces what I just read. Perhaps people may actually be interested in what I have to say about these books.

Other than that I will probably also write about other pop culture things I'm interested in, mostly movies and TV, and maybe a stray thought. I doubt I'll get personal in here, but who knows?

In any event, welcome to The Deckled Edge. I hope you find what I actually write entertaining.

See ya.

REVIEW: "The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu" by Tom Lin

The history of Chinese immigrants in the 19th century is--at best--an acknowledged fact of hardship and mistreatment. It happened, but the i...