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Asian American Dreams

By Zia, Helen
Publication: Kirkus Reviews
Date: Saturday, January 15 2000
Zia, a Chinese-American and co-editor of the reference Asian American Biography, intertwines a memoir of her own life
with an informal history of Asians in America.
Unless one starts with prehistoric immigrants crossing the Bering Straits, the first Asians to arrive

in America were Filipinos.
Spanish traders impressed them as seaman, and many jumped ship in Louisiana in the 16th century. After the Spanish-American
War, Filipinos, technically US citizens, immigrated in large numbers to Alaska, where they worked, under barbarous conditions,
in salmon canneries. Of course, as Zia points out, the Japanese fared even worse, rounded up and placed in internment camps
as WWII began, even as many of the first-born, the nisei, fought both in Europe and the Pacific. In fact, in one of Zia's many
telling anecdotes, an all-Japanese unit was set to liberate Dachau, but was held back because of the publicity problem. Zia is
perhaps most passionate describing the Chinese, reminding us of the infamous exclusion law of the 1880s—instituted after many
of them had died to build the railroads and the country, in a sense, was done with them. Into the larger Chinese story Zia weaves
her own more intimate history. A child of the 1960s and initially a traditional, compliant daughter on the path toward becoming
a physician, she threw off the traces, joining forces with black activists and groups opposing the Vietnam War. Yet Asians were
special, ""invisible"" and yet discriminated against even among activists. Instead of following in the mold of other activists, Zia
took yet another route—to Detroit, where she bolted together automobiles and came to see herself as a writer and agitator for
Chinese-American rights.
Evenhanded, subtle, and engaging, though Zia's interwoven memoir is less compelling than the vast story of these many
peoples, laboring mightily to become Americans. (B&w photos, not seen)

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