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183 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1981
All that's to the good, but the play itself feels sloppily thrown together, so that, even as each scene is pretty compelling, they don't really cohere into a complete vision, and the overall impression is a bit random for my tastes. It feels very much like the work of a talented writer who's not yet found the proper form for his ideas--like an early sketch from an excellent painter where many of the recognizable techniques and themes are there but in a nascent state. I'd also say that, in trying to counteract unmasculine stereotypes, Chin sometimes veers (fairly uncritically) into misogyny, and his depiction of Black characters (and Black Americans, more generally) is fraught with issues. He's not quite as bad as the Beats on that front, but he's also not that far off from the Beats, so there are some uncomfortable moments. For all of these reasons, though I enjoyed quite a few moments in the play, I don't know that I'd ever want to see The Chickencoop Chinaman performed.
Despite the above issues, Chin's energy, writing, and voice are intriguing, making me believe that his later work (e.g., Year of the Dragon, the other play in this book), will be much better than this early effort. By all accounts, he's one of the formative figures in Asian-American theatre, and there's all kinds of material in The Chickencoop Chinaman that hints at why. I'll come back to it when I hit virtual year 1974 in my American-lit read-through.