Curtis Chin’s memoir tells his story of growing up in 1980s Detroit.
Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP
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Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

Curtis Chin’s memoir tells his story of growing up in 1980s Detroit.
Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP
For Curtis Chin, the family restaurant he grew up with in Detroit will always feel like one of the greatest equalizers to witness: “It was one of the rare places in the segregated city where everyone felt welcome. Black or white, rich or poor, Christian or Jewish, the restaurant, we took anyone’s money.”
Who is he? Chin is a writer and co-founder of the Asian American Writers’ Workshop in New York City.
- He got his start writing for network television, and eventually transitioned into creating documentaries focusing on social justice, as well as writing for a variety of outlets.
What’s the big deal? Chin’s new memoir, Everything I Learned, I Learned in a Chinese Restaurant tells his life story of growing up in 1980s Detroit — infusing his focus on diversity and community, and how they affected his upbringing.
- Chin describes the difficulty living in the motor city at that time, as the automobile industry struggled, the AIDS epidemic took its toll, and the usage of crack cocaine became more widespread.
- While he witnessed the world around him struggling, Chin had his own challenges to face as well: chiefly, coming out as gay in a working-class immigrant community, and going on to become a first-generation college…
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