
While acting with Impossible Crimes Unit Officers, Sarah Green and Miles Turner, Willis becomes increasingly irritated with how much liberty they have to mess with the script. Forever playing roles like Generic Asian Man, Willis is determined to earn the part of Kung Fu Guy. In the narrative present, Willis attempts burying his own feelings of entrapment, by embracing his assigned roles in the cop show production Black and White. As a child, Willis remembers listening to his parents' frequent conversations about someday escaping Interior Chinatown. They moved into the Chinatown SRO Apartments shortly after their marriage, and began working in the Golden Palace Restaurant on the building's ground floor. Despite their tireless efforts to assimilate, Willis's parents found it impossible to find work in their fields, to buy a home, or to pursue a future according to their own desires and aspirations. Dorothy left her home country after her mother's death, and Ming-Chen ventured to America in an effort to help his family after his father was killed during the White Terror. Immigrants from Taiwan, Dorothy and Ming-Chen have struggled to survive in American culture since their arrival. While the narrative shifts back and forth in time, and moves frequently between second person narrator Willis Wu's staged and lived versions of reality, the following summary follows a traditional linear trajectory.Īs a young boy, Willis Wu grows up in Interior Chinatown with his parents, Dorothy and Ming-Chen.

Pantheon Books, 2020.Ĭharles Yu's Interior Chinatown is divided into seven acts, and adopts a screenplay-style structure.

The following version of this book was used to create the guide: Yu, Charles.
