In May 2019,
Alfred A. Knopf, a Penguin Random House imprint, published
The White Devil’s Daughters: The Women Who Fought Slavery in San Francisco’s Chinatown, a narrative history of the trafficking of Asian girls and women that flourished in the West during the first hundred years of Chinese immigration. The book focuses on San Francisco’s Occidental Mission Home, a “safe house” that opened in 1874 for enslaved and vulnerable Chinese women and girls. The book also shines a light on Donaldina (Dolly) Cameron, who rescued more than 60 mostly Chinese girls, women and babies to a shelter in San Anselmo. Siler “vividly recounts a shocking episode from America’s past in this gripping history,” wrote
Publishers Weekly. "It will fascinate readers interested in the history of women, immigration, and racism.” In its starred review,
Kirkus Reviews called ''The White Devil's Daughters
"An accessible, well-written, riveting tale of a dismal, little-known corner of American history." The White Devil's Daughters'' was selected as an Editors' Choice pick by the
New York Times Book Review. The
Commonwealth Club of California named ''The White Devil's Daughters
as a finalist for a 2019 California Book Award, and The California Independent Bookseller Alliance granted 2019 "Golden Poppy" awards to The White Devil's Daughters'' in the non-fiction and regional categories. ==Other work==