Writing or Chaos feat. Ed Lin
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In this episode, award-winning crime writer Ed Lin takes us from his childhood growing up in his family’s Jersey Shore ‘hot sheet’ motel to becoming a journalist and the first author ever to win three Asian American Literary Awards.
We talk about the strange path from feeling like an outsider to finding your voice, and how Ed learned to channel self-doubt into fiction. Along the way, he shares why humor matters, even in the darkest stories, and how the funniest moments can sometimes make the hardest truths land.
From his literary debut, Waylaid, to his Robert Chow crime novels set in 1970s Manhattan Chinatown, to his acclaimed Taipei Night Market series, Ed has built a career around telling stories that are both entertaining and deeply observant. His latest novel, The Dead Can’t Make a Living, explores immigration, class, migrant labor, and the hidden hierarchies that shape our lives, all through the lens of a gripping crime story.
Ed shares how his years in journalism taught him to pay attention to the details people overlook, and why he believes every great crime novel is, at heart, a social novel. It’s a conversation full of laughs, insight, and the reminder that sometimes the things that make us feel most like imposters are also the things that give us our unique perspective.