Min Jin Lee is the author of the novels Pachinko and Free Food for Millionaires, a New York Times Editor’s Choice, among other honors. She was awarded the 2004 Narrative Prize for her story “Axis of Happiness,” and her essays have been anthologized in Breeder and To Be Real. From 2007 to 2011 Min Jin lived in Tokyo, where she wrote Pachinko. She lives in New York City with her family.


Free Food for Millionaires

A Story

by Min Jin Lee

1. Options

Competence can be a curse. As a capable young woman, Casey Han felt compelled to choose respectability and success. But it was glamour and insight that she craved. A Korean immigrant who’d grown up in a dim, blue-collar neighborhood in Queens, she’d hoped for a bright, glittering life beyond the workhorse struggles of her parents, who managed a Manhattan dry cleaner.

Casey was unusually tall for a Korean, nearly five feet eight, slender, and self-conscious about what she wore. She kept her black hair shoulder length, fastidiously powdered her nose, and wore wine-colored lipstick without variation. To save money, she wore her eyeglasses at home, but outside she wore contact lenses to correct her nearsightedness. She did not believe she was pretty but felt she had something—some sort of workable sex appeal. She admired feminine modesty and looked down at women who tried to appear too sexy. For a girl of only twenty-two, Casey had numerous theories of beauty and sexuality, but the essence of her philosophy was that allure trumped flagrant display. She’d read that Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis advised a woman to dress like a column, and Casey never failed to follow that instruction.

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