I liked this book about a group of Chinese immigrants who struggle with life and love in New York's Chinatown. The story actually spans decades, starting in China where many of the characters cross paths in the Worker's Cinema, a run-down movie theater that's used by the town's gay men, most of them married, to meet up with each other. Over the next decade, many of these characters immigrate to New York where they live in extreme poverty. One of the things I was struck by is the overall unhappiness of all of the characters in the book. The women are in loveless marriages, and the men are struggling to survive while also secretly seeking out male companionship. No one communicates effectively with each other, and resentments and regrets linger for decades. One of the characters feels responsible for the closure of the cinema that resulted in her husband's death; it's only late in the book that she learns that the cinema would have closed anyway and she carried that guilt all her life for nothing. None of these characters are very likable, and they all make bad decisions, which would usually make me dislike the book, but I found this one to be very compelling.
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