The sweeping history of the American dream, Manhattan's Chinatown underbelly and the grandma mastermind behind one of the largest human smuggling rings.
Patrick Radden Keefe is an award-winning staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty - winner of the Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction, Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland, as well as two previous critically-acclaimed books, The Snakehead, and Chatter. He is the writer and host of the eight-part podcast Wind of Change on the origins of the Scorpions' power ballad, which The Guardian named the #1 podcast of 2020.
Reads like a mashup of The Godfather and Chinatown, complete with
gun battles, a ruthless kingpin and a mountain of cash. Except that
it's all true.
*Time*
Essential reading. . . . A rich, beautifully told story, so
suspenseful and with so many unexpected twists that in places it
reads like a John le Carré novel.
*The Washington Post*
A powerful piece of reportage about the violent underworld of New
York’s Chinatown
*The Times*
A masterwork . . . In this single tale about a global criminal,
Keefe finds a story of quintessentially American hope.
*Christian Science Monitor*
Painstakingly reported and vividly told. . . . As immigration
reform languishes in Washington . . . everyone involved – from
policymakers to activists to the undocumented – would be wise to
read The Snakehead.
*Newsweek*
Published in the UK for the first time, Patrick Radden Keefe’s
tireless investigation of human trafficking from China to the US
reveals the desperation of the migrants and the woman at the heart
of it
*The Observer*
A formidably well-researched book that is as much a paean to its
author's industriousness as it is a chronicle of crime.
*Janet Maslin, The New York Times*
Bracing, vivid . . . Keefe writes gracefully, perceptively,
insightfully . . . Without sacrificing one iota of narrative
momentum, he untangles a dauntingly complicated human-trafficking
operation so a reader can effortlessly follow along.
*The New York Times Book Review*
Thoroughly researched and creatively drawn (some scenes are highly
dramatic and vivid) by the New Yorker writer, [The Snakehead] is
ultimately about the risks these refugees took to play their part
in the enduring, grand narrative theme of the American Dream.
*The Sydney Morning Herald*
Brilliant . . . Keefe’s mastery of this chapter of our ongoing
immigration saga is impressive. He muses thoughtfully about its
many conundrums and highlights how our ethos of welcoming the
persecuted gets soured by bad policy and the pervasive exploitation
of the helpless.
*Los Angeles Times*
Engrossing. . . . Keefe’s narrative delves deeply into Chinatown
and the labyrinthine smuggling routes between China and America,
but it’s also a glimpse into our conflicted feelings about illegals
and the morass of America’s immigration policy.
*New York Magazine*
A timely, powerful and thoroughly researched book.
*The Irish Times*
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