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Han Ong

Author of Fixer Chao: A Novel

3+ Works 155 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Born & educated in the Philippines, Han Ong came to the U.S. as a teenager, & was awarded the MacArthur Fellowship in 1997. He is the author of several critically acclaimed plays. "Fixer Chao" is his first novel. (Bowker Author Biography)
Image credit: Photo: Annette Hornischer

Works by Han Ong

Fixer Chao: A Novel (2001) 111 copies, 4 reviews
The Disinherited: A Novel (2004) 41 copies

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1968
Gender
male
Birthplace
Manila, Philippines
Associated Place (for map)
Manila, Philippines

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
This novel by playwright Han Ong is a fable of a down-on-his luck Filipino man who becomes a noted Chinese expert on Feng shui, bilking upper class Manhattanites out of their hard-earned money. Ong's debut novel follows William Paulinka as he relates his tale of hustling for money at the Port Authority bus terminal to buying cashmere blankets and forty dollar a jar hair pomade. William is a likeable character and it seems entirely righteous that he swindle these characters, as if it were show more divine providence. At least, this is how William portrays it. Considering he is a hustler and a cheat, we have an entirely unreliable and morally unredeemable protagonist - why should we believe or sympathize with anything he says or does?
For one, William is caught in this game of deceit by Shem, a man who had access and privilege and is the mastermind of the whole plot to swindle these rich city dwellers. Two, we see how William lives and the squalor which is his daily life - how we can judge his actions when he is confronted with an opportunity to make some money and not have to sell his body to do it?
A remarkable novel with intriguing characters, including one of William's victims, Kendo, who, seeing William as his entre to the criminal underworld, latches onto William with tenacious intensity. There is Preciosa, William's upstairs neighbor, a fellow immigrant from the Phillipines, and a secretive woman whose past intrigues William. There are the numerous rich dupes, most importantly Suzy Yamada, who resembles Kirosawa's Isenzu Yamada in looks and spirit. It is she who becomes William's (or, "Master Chao", as he is introduced to society) nemesis and the villain of the novel.
William's story is primarily one of self-discovery, as he faces racism, classism and the anitpathy of the rich for the poor, who work for them and serve them.
Fixer Chao is an examination or a distilling of these two opposing worlds, brought to a closer view as William steps between the two so effortlessly as Master Chao. His personal growth and journey becomes an odyssey for the reader as well. An intriguing view of the social stratification and one man's attempts to climb up and out of indigence and despair.
(Read January 2002)
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Fun book about a male hustler who turns himself into a Feng Shui master overnight. Perhaps a tad bit long, but it was refreshing to read a book narrated by a homosexual whose sexuality hardly factors into the plot at all. A tragi-comic tale of manners and all things from sexual politics to the trend-obsessed silliness inherent in our culture. Only an immigrant could see us so clearly. This is a brilliant first novel.
Wrote the short story in New Yorker called "Ming" about recovering drunk who inherited a priceless Chinese cup.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
3
Also by
2
Members
155
Popularity
#135,096
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
4
ISBNs
7
Languages
1

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