Another reviewer said this is one of the books that are "slow, confusing, anxiety inducing, heartbreaking, unsettling, upsetting, and ultimately put you in a bad mood having finished them” and I’d say yes, that’s actually why I enjoyed it so much. It was a slog to get all the characters straight, and another to figure out the narrator (half the book’s told in the first person, and the other half from an omniscient narrator following Kit’s point of view) but the main characters are real and quite easy to sympathize with. The book is set in 1922 and I think portrayed, among other attitudes, the pervasive and systemic negativity toward Asian workers. I kept being thrown off by modern-day terminology and vocabulary, and this should have been addressed by editing, otherwise I did enjoy the writing style and dialogues and will certainly look up other books by this author. Yay Canadian writers who use Canadian settings! 4 stars.