The Oriental Questionis a solid empirical work, using government records, contemporary newspapers, memoirs, and secondary literature. It would be a highly usefu monograph for an undergraduate audience, since it brings together a broad range of information in a readable and congently argued style. -- Bonnie Huskins and Michael Boudreau, Canadian Literature, Issue 186, Autumn 2005A finely textured account that convincingly show that while anti-Asian racism was never a monolith, it became consolidated in the image of British Columbia as a "White Man#146;s province" during this era. the significance of this work is that, like the earlier volume, it catalogues English-language anti-Asian discourse in British Columbia. As such it is an invaluable reference for students of racism and of British Columbia#146;s history. -- Timothy J. Stanley, University of Ottawa, Labour/Le Travail, Issue 58, Fall 2005.This complex and meticulous study will reward an attentive reader.
It is an admirable contribution to the historiography of British Columbia nad Canada. -- Hilary K. Blair, The International History Review, March 2006.Roy's careful attention to political contest and compromise gives us a rich portrait of how British Columbia consolidated around white supremacy. These books are important empirical studies that will ultimately allow us to understand how migration and regional identities are framed in local and global terms. -- Henry Yu, University of British Columbia, Pacific Historical Review, vol. 75, no. 2, 2006.