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Eye and Guy
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Abercrombie & Fitch

It's a problem. She only goes out with white guys, he only goes out with blondes. It's the familiar case of Asians believing in their own bad press: they're geeks with small weenies, they're wallflowers with little mystery. Yet with age, they've become curious—perhaps they've been too harsh and narrow-minded all these years—and they accept the date that's been arranged for them by their parents. The date goes all right. Nothing to write home about, but not so terrible, not onerous enough to preclude another dinner. They get drunk and end up on her living room floor, yanking clothes off. Fucking-A, you're huge, she says, and she discards her coolie hat and slaps him so hard, his slanty left eye immediately begins to welt. Fucking-A, you're sick, he says, sinking his bucktoothed mouth into her neck—sallow, tasty—loving it.

Don Lee is the author of the novel Country of Origin, which will be published in July by W.W. Norton, and the story collection Yellow, which won the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. A third-generation Korean American, he is the editor of the literary journal Ploughshares. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Lee, Country of origin
© W.W. Norton
Lee, Yellow
© W.W. Norton

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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