This is a solid addition to the historical fiction canon of Canada's immigrants. This book covers the first year of Hoi Wing Woo's time in St. Catharine's, Ontario. At just thirteen years old, Hoi Wing is sent to the Gold Mountain (Canada) to work in a Chinese laundry run by two brothers, expected to send as much of his earnings home as he can to help support his rural Chinese family. I had heard of the Chinese laundries that provided employment for many Chinese immigrants doing hard, hot, unpleasant work that most Canadians did not want to do, but I didn't know much about them. Through Hoi Wing's eyes, we learn about life in a laundry, the harsh racism Chinese immigrants faced in Canada, and about the little Chinese communities that sprung up in Canada's cities and towns, as the Chinese citizens (mostly men due to unfair immigration laws that prevented them from bringing their families) stuck together and helped each other. Hoi Wing befriends an Irish maid who came to Canada as a home child, and a sympathetic librarian and her progressive minded aunt, and together these friends help Hoi Wing learn English and fulfill his dream of getting an education. This is a coming of age novel that I think would be best marketed to a YA audience, but I enjoyed it very much and became very invested in the characters and their stories.