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432 pages, Hardcover
First published July 15, 2009
In 1960 there were 236,000 Chinese in America. By1990 that number had swelled to 1.6 million. A large portion of that growth was Fujianese, and for the vast majority of Fujianese emigrants, the first stop was New York City. Chinatown residents began referring to East Broadway as Fuzhou Street. They knew that most of the Fujianese rivals were illegal and still paying off their passage. They called them ‘eighteen-thousand-dollar men’ after the going snakehead rate in the eighties.