Are Asian Americans trespassers? I guess the answer is negative. Similar to the early European immigrants, Asian Americans have brought their own cultural habit to a new country. The establishment of Chinese schools, Buddhist temples, Korean Christian churches, and shopping malls is no way a form of intrusion into the white communities but an increase of cultural and economical diversity. Willow S. Lung-Amam, author of the book and also son of an African American mother and an Asian immigrant father, employ unique research methods to explore how Asian American community was formed in “techno-ethnoburbs” areas such as Fremont in Silicon Valley, and the challenges it is constantly facing, mostly imposed by white policy makers. I am particularly intrigued by how the author immersed himself into the local groups, talk to students, school broad members, city planners and store owners, etc, to derive a detailed and complete view of Asian American communities. Nonetheless through this process, unpleasant results have shown. In specific, the constructions are sometimes obstructed, or the investment in housing is barely made. To solve the problem, I think we cannot view the culture acceptance issue as a form of battle. There ought not be a battle for suburbia because there are not supposed to be a winning group among people with the same citizenship. A state of post-racial is not necessary, because people need to remember their own history. Nevertheless, overly emphasis of the concept of “living communities of certain race” is not helpful either. Only when people find the balance between their cultural identity in a historical context and to what extent they are going to adapt into modern surroundings, the society will achieve a state where people with different racial identities “casually rub elbows on crowded urban streets”.