Try GOLD - Free
Desperate measures
New Zealand Listener
|March 25-31 2023
A gripping exposé of US people-smugglers is full of the writer's trademark rigour and humanity.
THE SNAKEHEAD: An epic tale of the Chinatown underworld and the American dream, by Patrick Radden Keefe ($39.99, Picador)
When Sean Chen saw the 45m Golden Venture floating in the harbour in Kenya's Mombasa, it looked too small, he thought, to get him and hundreds of other undocumented migrants across the Atlantic to the American east coast. Many of his fellow travellers agreed, and flatly refused to get on. But Sean was 18 years old, and filled with resilient optimism. He had spent weeks trekking through the Burmese jungle, and months living on a cargo ship which ran out of food off the African coast.
Like thousands of others, he had left home in the Fujian Province in China without any ID or documents - no passport, no visas, nothing except a few T-shirts and pants in a backpack. Chen had been expelled from school at 14 after joining his cousin's pro-democracy protest. After harassment from local authorities, his parents paid people smugglers, or "snakeheads", a down payment to get their boy to the US.

This story is from the March 25-31 2023 edition of New Zealand Listener.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM New Zealand Listener
New Zealand Listener
Going west
In 1901, Henry Charles Swan left Auckland on a solo circum-navigation of the world. He got all the way to Henderson.
5 mins
May 23-29 2026
New Zealand Listener
Blowhard blows harder
Johnny rang with great news. I wouldn't have to wait until the end of the month, he said.
3 mins
May 23-29 2026
New Zealand Listener
Debuts lead Ockham winners
It's a year of firsts for this year's Ockham New Zealand Book Awards. Debuts take top honours in three categories and a former PM wins a first book award, as does a story collection that didn't appear in the fiction longlist.
2 mins
May 23-29 2026
New Zealand Listener
Another claim to fame
Ché-Fu is to become the third artist to be inducted twice into the NZ Music Hall of Fame: This time it's for the mark he made after Supergroove. He talks to RUSSELL BAILLIE.
6 mins
May 23-29 2026
New Zealand Listener
Gutsy greens
Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall finds tasty plant-based ways to get more fibre into our diets.
5 mins
May 23-29 2026
New Zealand Listener
On the brink of Crink
You've heard of Nato and Apec. And Asean and Brics. But have you heard about Crink?
2 mins
May 23-29 2026
New Zealand Listener
Peak oil
The premium price of extra virgin olive oil doesn't necessarily guarantee health benefits.
3 mins
May 23-29 2026
New Zealand Listener
Being Julia
GIVEN THEY WERE WOMEN WHO shattered the glass ceiling, former New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark, US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and ex-Australian PM Julia Gillard share much in common. Plus this: they're all on NZ theatre stages this year.
1 min
May 23-29 2026
New Zealand Listener
Doing her justice
A play about Ruth Bader Ginsburg looks for the humanity behind the intellect of the legendary US Supreme Court judge.
4 mins
May 23-29 2026
New Zealand Listener
We want to believe
A down-the-rabbit-hole inquiry into alien 'encounters concludes with the truth still out there.
3 mins
May 23-29 2026
Translate
Change font size

