HPL Welcomes Author Curtis Chin to Summer Reading Program
By Francis Page Jr.
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July 13, 2026 (Houston Style Magazine) — Houston’s summer heat may be relentless, but Houston Public Library is offering a refreshing change of menu: one celebrated author, one unforgettable memoir and an hour of conversation designed to feed both the mind and the spirit.
On Saturday, July 18, 2026, from 2 to 3 p.m., author, filmmaker and cultural advocate Curtis Chin will appear at the Alief-David M. Henington Regional Library, 11903 Bellaire Boulevard, as part of HPL’s Summer Reading Program. The in-person program is intended for adults, and advance registration is required through HPL’s official event page. Seating is limited, making this one Saturday reservation Houstonians should secure before the literary table fills up.
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Chin arrives with a title as inviting as the aroma drifting from a neighborhood kitchen: Everything I Learned, I Learned in a Chinese Restaurant. Published in 2023, the award-winning memoir follows his coming of age as a gay Chinese American in working-class Detroit, where his family’s Chung’s Cantonese Cuisine became far more than a place to eat. It was a classroom, community center, observation deck and unofficial city hall—with egg rolls.
The restaurant opened in Detroit’s original Chinatown in 1940, relocated after urban redevelopment displaced the district and remained part of the city until 2000. Its customers crossed boundaries of race, class, profession and identity, giving young Chin a front-row education in how a city survives, argues, laughs and keeps showing up. The memoir arranges memories like a restaurant menu, serving family history and social commentary in portions that are humorous, candid and deeply human.
That history carries special weight. Chin grew up during the era surrounding the 1982 killing of Vincent Chin, a watershed moment in Asian American civil-rights activism. Curtis Chin has explained that the tragedy helped shape his commitment to opening doors for Asian Americans and other people of color to tell their stories. His work reminds readers that storytelling is not decoration around history; it is one way communities protect themselves from erasure.
Chin also helped establish the Asian American Writers’ Workshop after its founders began gathering in New York City in 1991, seeking a supportive literary community for writers of color. The organization became a nonprofit in 1992 and has spent more than three decades publishing, mentoring and amplifying Asian diasporic voices. Chin served as its first executive director, helping build a platform that would support generations of writers.
His creative journey did not stop on the printed page. Chin wrote comedy for network and cable television before transitioning into social-justice documentaries. His films have screened at more than 600 venues in 20 countries, while his writing has appeared in CNN, Bon Appétit, the Detroit Free Press and The Emancipator/Boston Globe. His short documentary Dear Corky premiered through PBS’s American Masters, and Warren King: King of Cardboard, produced by Chin and Adam Wolman, premiered on PBS in May 2026.
Houston is an especially fitting stop for this conversation. The Bayou City understands what happens when cultures meet around a table. Alief, one of Houston’s most internationally flavored communities, speaks in countless accents, shops in multiple languages and knows that food often becomes the first handshake between neighbors.
Chin’s story begins in Detroit, but its questions—Who belongs? Who gets remembered? What do families teach without ever writing it down? — will feel right at home on Bellaire Boulevard. The appearance also continues a proud public-library tradition. Houston’s library roots reach back to the Houston Lyceum established in 1854, when a collection of fewer than 100 books helped create a civic space for lectures, debates and learning. More than 170 years later, HPL continues expanding that idea: the library is not simply where stories are stored, but where people gather to hear one another more clearly.
For readers, aspiring writers, filmmakers, history lovers and anyone raised in a family business, Chin’s visit promises humor, reflection and honest conversation. His memoir proves that some of life’s biggest lessons arrive without a syllabus—sometimes they come with a takeout menu, a crowded dining room and parents wise enough to tell their children to listen.
“I love making connections with audiences and seeing how universal our stories can be,” Chin said of his Houston visit.
On July 18, HPL will provide the room. Curtis Chin will bring the stories. Houston only needs to bring its curiosity—and perhaps an appetite for a second helping.
More information: houstonlibrary.org/home
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Kierra LeeKIELEESTYLE@GMAIL.COM4096658446