¡°A Nabokovian stylistic tour de force.¡± -Alexander Chee, author of The Queen of the Night and How to Write an Autobiographical Novel
¡°The story of Chungpa Han is truly, like the old New York he encounters, as ¡®million-hued as a dream.¡¯ A wonderfully resplendent evocation of a newcomer¡¯s America, Younghill Kang¡¯s classic novel is as vibrant and pointed in its vision today as it was 60 years ago, and may prove to be one of our most vital documents. East Goes West deserves rediscovery.¡± -Chang-rae Lee, author of Native Speaker
¡°Thrillingly timeless . . . The finest, funniest, craziest, sanest, most cheerfully depressing Korean-American novel . . . A vast, unruly masterpiece that is our earliest portrait of the artist as a young Korean-American . . . East Goes West¡¯s tumbling prose and loose, picaresque structure feel amazingly ¡®free and vigorous¡¯ (per [Thomas] Wolfe) today. . . . The novelist and memoirist Alexander Chee¡¯s rousing introduction to the new Penguin Classics edition . . . argues strongly for its relevance today. . . . Its value is in the heady mix of high and low, the antic yet clear-eyed take on race relations, the parade of tragic and comic bit players, and above all, the unleashed chattering of Chungpa¡¯s distinctive voice. . . . The Penguin edition . . . reminds us of how excellent [Kang] really was. . . . This brash modernist comic novel still feels electric.¡± -Ed Park, The New York Review of Books
¡°Kang is as wide awake and high-spirited as he is scholarly and thoughtful, and he writes with a keen sense of character. . . . East Goes West offers a rich largesse of color and flavor, personality and impression and event. It is one of those rare books which will arouse interest, ring changes on laughter and leave its residue of thought.¡± -The New York Times Book Review
¡°An immigrant epic that criss-crosses a less-than-welcoming American landscape . . . Thirty-year-old bestseller The Joy Luck Club perennially provides irrefutable proof Asian American stories warrant shelf space. That Penguin Classics-their venerable list considered a significant barometer of what comprises the Anglophone literary canon-has added this . . . is, undoubtedly, long-awaited, long-deserved recognition.¡± -The Christian Science Monitor
¡°Kang is a born writer, everywhere he is free and vigorous: he has an original and poetic mind, and he loves life.¡± -Thomas Wolfe
¡°After Mr. Kang, most books seem a bit flat. . . . What a man! What a writer!¡± -Rebecca West
¡°Here is a really great writer.¡± -H. G. Wells