Wesley Erks, sometime farmer, machinist, coke runner, amateur historian, and folklorist, drives southward through the mountains from Vancouver to San Francisco with four illegal Chinese immigrants, one of whom is being pursued by assassins
there were times where i genuinely could not pay attention. some of the history stuff got me nodding off but otherwise this book has an interesting plot with unique characters and adventures. i learned a lot of new words
This very unusual novel is an interesting look at issues of immigration and the multitude of ways in which immigrants have been welcomed into this country when convenient, and repelled when no longer needed to supply sources of cheap, easily exploited labor. The "coyote" who is the central character in this book is a man trying to understand both his heritage and his personal experience as a part-time smuggler of cargo that has suddenly become "human". The writing style of this particular author was at times hard to follow. Perhaps the edginess & uneven pace was deliberate, but for this reader it distracted from an otherwise gripping narrative.
I read this years ago (it was published in 1980) and it has been on my 'to reread' shelf. This is a book rich with the history and geography of the Pacific Northwest. The main character is taking illegal Chinese immigrants across the Canadian border to San Francisco's Chinatown. Some great female characters. I got confused about who was chasing who and what was going on, but that was intended, I think. First line: "The fog, they say, its density and in winter its bitterness, is worst in Chinatown of all places in San Francisco."
This odd fish is a western landscape novel with a cold war, immigrant subplot involving Chinese mafia-type gangs. Told you it was odd, it is also heavy, like the atmosphere on a hot summer afternoon as the thunderclouds roll in and its hard to breathe until that rain hits.