Stacey L. Smith could have conveyed the nuances of California slave legislation with greater clarity – that chapter is a bit tough to follow – but overall this is a clear, concise history of slave and free labor in 19th-century California. Smith argues that, although on paper California was a free state, plenty of slave labor still went on. White Southerners who moved west with their slaves still practiced slavery until the mid-1850s and used various legal loopholes, plus outright coercion and deceit, to keep their slaves longer. Meanwhile, black and Native American children were often trapped in slave-like apprenticeships; Sonoran Mexicans frequently were trapped in bad labor deals on ranches and in mines; and Chinese laborers frequently endured bad treatment. White fears of "coolie" and "peon" foreigners were grossly exaggerated; Chinese and Mexican immigrants were rarely full-on slaves. Nonetheless, the fear of Chinese and Mexican slaves was used by Republicans and Democrats alike to justify exclusionary immigration laws. Ultimately, California was a free state, but one that allowed in few non-white immigrants. This book certainly gives a different perspective on the history of the Civil War and Reconstruction, not to mention sunny California.