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APRIL 3 , 2000 VOL. 155 NO. 13

Rebel Son
Assimilation's woes in a sprightly first novel
By PAUL GRAY

  ALSO IN TIME
COVER: Referendum on Reform
Though he himself isn't running, President Kim Dae Jung is at the center of a parliamentary election that may determine whether he can continue his liberal economic policies
Extended Interview: Kim on politics, North Korea and the Net
Censorship: A new tolerance is bringing sex into the arts
Viewpoint: A writer warns of a national authoritarian streak
SOUTH ASIA: Mission Impossible
During a colorful visit, Bill Clinton wins kudos for diplomacy but is muted on the region's most critical issue, Kashmir
Eyewitness: A massacre stuns a Sikh village
Viewpoint: The President should have pressed for peace
TAIWAN: Tectonic Shift
While Beijing seems to be taking Chen Shui-bian's victory in stride, the Kuomintang struggles to keep from falling apart
Viewpoint: A tale of two presidents

CINEMA: This Fighter Can Act
Chinese action star Jet Li is ready to conquer Hollywood
Books: Rebel Son
Assimilation's woes in a sprightly first novel

TRAVEL WATCH: How You Can Get Those Airline Upgrades
ESSAY: History Comes Tumbling Down

It is the late 1970s, and Sterling Lung, 26, the son of Chinese immigrants, believes he has struggled free from the clutches of his parents' old-fashioned expectations. A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, where, he says, he was named "most likely to serve," Sterling is the chef at the Richfield Ladies' Club in green and tastefully affluent Connecticut. When one of the ladies praises his ponytail and guesses that he wears it in honor of his forebears back in China, Sterling muses, "My forebears? Think Beatles, Jerry Garcia."

In other words, David Wong Louie's The Barbarians Are Coming (Putnam; 372 pages) opens as a sprightly novel of assimilation, a rich tradition in American literature that has constantly been refurbished by new immigrants and their restive, talented children.

Louie, a professor at ucla and the author of Pangs of Love, a highly praised 1991 collection of stories, initially plays his rebellious hero's story for laughs. But serious matters begin to tax Sterling's sense of humor. His parents have sent money to a young woman in Hong Kong so she can fly to the U.S. and become his bride. His father is ill, perhaps dying. And Bliss, his American girlfriend who is studying dentistry in Iowa, announces that she is pregnant with their child. Beset on all sides, Sterling says, "I worry I have lost my will to cook."

That isn't the only deprivation that Sterling suffers in the course of the novel. What begins in comedy ends in pathos, with the hero wiser and sadder at the end. The Barbarians Are Coming may seem like two novels, not particularly well matched, but both of them are readable and fascinating.

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