ARTICLES:
Arts & Culture
Book
Review:
Paper Bullets by Kip Fulbeck
Our
review of Eurasian author Kip Fulbeck's acclaimed "fictional
autobiography."
By
Mandy Willingham
July
2002
In
his first full-length published work, Paper Bullets: A Fictional
Autobiography (University of Washington Press 2001), award-winning
Chinese-Caucasian performer, artist, professor and author Kip Fulbeck
explores the effects of stereotypical depictions and perceptions
of Asians, particularly those perpetuated by the American media.
Through a series of hilarious, aggressive and poignant short stories,
Fulbeck addresses such precarious topics as Asian fetishizing, Asian
male masculinity, interracial dating, and bicultural families. He
also expounds on a subject he knows best: Hapas. Throughout Paper
Bullets, Fulbeck considers issues regarding Hapa identity, and the
evolving role of Hapas within Asian and Caucasian culture.
As
a whole, Paper Bullets is a raw and risky read. Fulbeck reveals
an engaging and delirious narrative, under the aptly sub-titled
"fictional autobiography" format. Through this, readers
are privy to the development of an unabashed protagonist created
from Fulbeck's own truths, exaggerations, and imagination. The result
is a hybrid of fact and fiction, interweaving myth, anecdote, pop
culture references, and social musings.
Fulbeck's
narrator is drawn in part from his own experiences growing up in
1980s Southern California suburbia, raised by a Chinese mother and
Caucasian father. He portrays the dichotomy of the narrator's bicultural
childhood with contrasting, and humorous images. In one chapter,
the narrator describes weekend treks to Los Angeles Chinatown for
dim sum and triads-seeking adventures with his Chinese cousins (triads
are Chinese mafia organizations). This is later contrasted with
amusing descriptions of his father's affinity for slowly progressing
steak dinners served with fine wine by buxom waitresses.
Fulbeck
spares no expense in divulging the grittier details of his narrator's
past. His confessions are sources of contradiction: from the brutal
elementary school taunts inflicted by the narrator on the new "F.O.B."
(Fresh Off the Boat) transfer student, to the crushing experience
of his first love and subsequent loss at the hands of a nubile,
14-year old Brook Shields look-alike. Continuing his tumultuous
encounters with the opposite sex, the narrator is portrayed alternating
between dating and bedding exclusively Caucasian, and then Asian
women. In an ironic turn, he is eventually ensnared by one Caucasian
woman with a penchant for dating and deceiving Hapa men.
At
turns thoughtful, hilarious and incendiary, Paper Bullets entrusts
its reader with the kind of intimacies only sometimes revealed on
the pages of diaries, or whispered in the ears of those we love.
Never mind that Fulbeck's confessions vacillate between undetermined
truths, embellishments, and complete fiction. In the end, Paper
Bullets is storytelling that is rewarding and unrelenting.
About
the Author
Mandy Willingham is a freelance writer currently living in Los Angeles.
She graduated from Beloit College in 1999 with background in Creative
Writing and Journalism.
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