Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Ed Lin

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Full Name
  
Ed Lin

Name
  
Ed Lin


Role
  
Writer

Spouse
  
Cindy Cheung

Ed Lin wwwedlinforpresidentcomwpcontentuploads2007

Books
  
Waylaid, This Is a Bust, Ghost Month

Ed lin reads from ghost month


Ed Lin is a Taiwanese-American writer, actor and novelist. He is the first author to win three Asian American Literary Awards. His first novel, Waylaid (2002) won a Members' Choice Award at the Asian American Literary Awards and also a Booklist Editors' Choice Award in Fiction in 2002. Lin has written a series of crime novels revolving around Chinese-American cop Robert Chow set in 1976 New York City Chinatown, which begins in This Is A Bust (2007) (Kaya Press), which won a Members' Choice Award at the Asian American Literary Awards, and continues with Snakes Can't Run (2010) (Minotaur Books) and One Red Bastard (2012) (Minotaur Books).

Contents

Snakes can t run by ed lin book trailer


Personal

Lin graduated from Columbia University with a Bachelor of science degree in Mining engineering around 1991 but was one class short for graduating with another Bachelor of Arts degree in Literature writing, which he wanted to obtain in order to go to Journalism school, an aspiration of his.

In 2002, Lin married Cindy Cheung, an actress. They have one son together.

Novels

Waylaid (2002), Lin's first novel is "the story of a Taiwanese/Chinese American boy struggling to grow up amidst the drudgery and sexual innuendo of his parents' sleazy motel on the Jersey Shore" and was a 2002 Booklist Editors' Choice in Fiction and also won a Members' Choice Award at the Asian American Literary Awards. It was made into a film Directed by Michael Kang entitled The Motel, which won the Humanitas Prize at the Sundance Film Festival and was also nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature.

His trilogy of crime novels featuring Chinese-American Police Detective Robert Chow set in 1970s Chinatown has also won awards and garnered praise. The series so far comprises This Is A Bust (2007) (Members Choice Award, 2008 Asian American Literary Awards, Booklist Starred Review, and Listed in Best American Last Sentences of Books of 2007 in The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2008, Edited by Dave Eggers), Snakes Can't Run (2010) (Publishers Weekly Starred Review), and One Red Bastard (2012) (Publishers Weekly Starred Review).

In 2014, Lin published a novel entitled Ghost Month, set in Taipei, Taiwan and revolving around a new detective protagonist named Jing-nan, who runs a food stand in a Taipei Night Market. Jing-nan begins to investigate the murder of a betel nut girl that also happened to be an ex-girlfriend of his.

In 2016, Lin released a sequel to Ghost Month also starring the character of Jing-nan entitled Incensed, where Jing-Nan gets summoned by his uncle, a ruthless gangster, who gives him an order he can’t refuse: he needs to watch over the gangster’s wild, rebellious 16-year-old daughter.

Short stories and serialized fiction

He also writes a serialized fiction series, or novel in installments, "Motherfuckerland" for Giant Robot Magazine. He also has published various short stories including "Dave" and "Chinese New Year" (published in The Asian American Literary Review) as well as "Man Vs." (published in Animal Farm) about the show Man v. Food.

Film appearances

Lin is also an actor, and stars as the title character "Norman Mao" in Derek Nguyen's The Potential Wives of Norman Mao which has screened at a variety of film festivals, including the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival, the Hawaii International Film Festival, the Asian American International Film Festival in New York City, The LA Shorts Fest, The Raindance Film Festival in London and the Cannes Film Festival Short Film Corner. He also stars alongside his wife Cindy Cheung in a Music Video for Magnetic North and Taiyo Na's "Home:Word" Directed by Wong Fu Productions.

References

Ed Lin Wikipedia