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Behind the Barbed Wire Fence

24 Sep

Some time this year, a new musical will open on Broadway called, “Allegiance.”  It is the story of actor George Takei (Mr. Sulu from Star Trek) and the years his family spent interned in Japanese internment camps during World War II.

The detainment of American citizens based on the country of origin and their race is a dark chapter in our nation’s history.  Fueled by anti-Japanese sentiments after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, nearly 120,000 Americans were sent to camps across the west and in the south purely because they were Japanese.  The conditions in the camps were bad.  Men in the camps were asked to swear loyalty oaths and those that didn’t, the “No-No boys,” were either imprisoned or repatriated to Japan, a country some of them had never even visited.  Many young men, to prove their loyalty to the United States, enlisted in the Army as part of the 100th/442nd.  This unit of the military was the most highly decorated unit in military history

On January 2, 1945, almost seventy years ago, the Supreme Court decided that loyal American citizens could not be imprisoned and, by 1946, the camps were closed.  However, the Japanese-Americans imprisoned during that time lost their dignity and their property.  Only one governor, Colorado Governor Ralph Carr, stood against the Federal government and gave state citizenship to the prisoners in his state.  To quote Governor Carr, “If you harm them, you must harm me. I was brought up in a small town where I knew the shame and dishonor of race hatred. I grew to despise it because it threatened the happiness of you and you and you.”

In the following list, I have included both fact and fiction; adult, young adult, and children’s books.  We learn best by remembering the mistakes that were made in the past.  The following books are an important step in teaching children about this little acknowledged chapter in American history:

Voices from the Camp: Internment of Japanese Americans During World War II, by Larry Dane Brimner.

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Author Brimner details personal testimony of Japanese American survivors of the World War II forced evacuation. The book discusses the actual “relocation” of Japanese Americans, daily life in the camps, and how people were treated upon their return to their former homes.  It also discusses the burden of shame that survivors of the camps carry. (Grades 7 to 12)

Fighting for Honor: Japanese Americans and World War II, by Michael Cooper.

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Examines the history of the Japanese people in the United States including the mass relocation and the recruitment of Japanese men to the 100th/442nd, the most decorated unit in the U.S. military. (Grades 6 to 12)

The Magic of Ordinary Days, by Ann Howard Creel.

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When a young woman in Denver becomes pregnant by a soldier, her father sends her into an arranged marriage to a farmer in Southern Colorado.  Taken from her home and urban lifestyle, the woman is at loose ends until she befriends two young Japanese women in the nearby Amache camp.  This friendship accidentally leads to the escape of German prisoners of war and the prosecution of the Japanese women.  Based on a true story, this is an excellent book club selection.  It was also made into a 2005 Hallmark movie starring Keri Russell and Skeet Ulrich.  (Grades 9+)

Red Berries, White Clouds, Blue Skies, by Sandra Dallas.

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When 12 year old Tomi and her family are “relocated” from Southern California to a camp on the Colorado plains, their lives go through upheaval.  Tomi is an optimistic girl and not only makes an adjustment, but helps other people in the camp to adjust, as well.  However, Tomi’s father had been imprisoned without cause and when he finally returns to his family, he is no longer a patriotic American, and his disillusionment spreads to his daughter.  Only after Tomi writes a prize winning essay on Why I Am an American do father and daughter make their peace with the treatment they experienced.  (Grades 4 to 8)

Tallgrass, by Sandra Dallas.

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When a young girl is murdered on a Colorado farm, the residents of the nearby Japanese internment camps are suspected.  A local girl observes the presence of prejudice in her community, even as her father displays his ethics by fighting bigotry.  (Grade 9+)

Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, by Jamie Ford.

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This popular book club selection takes place in Seattle just before the war.  A young Chinese boy who is a jazz aficionado, befriends a Japanese girl and a Black musician.  The two children experience racial discrimination as they are drawn to each other.  (Adult)

Silver Like Dust: One Family’s Story of America’s Japanese Internment, by Kimi Cunningham Grant.

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A young girl in Pennsylvania denies her Japanese heritage until she learns the story of her grandmother’s relocation to the Heart Mountain Camp in Wyoming.  (Adult)

Dash, by Kirby Larson.

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When her family is forced into an internment camp, Mitsi Kashino must give her beloved dog, Dash, to a neighbor.  During her imprisonment, it is the ongoing letters about Dash that keep Mitsi connected to the outside world.  (Grades 3 to 7)

Baseball Saved Us, by Ken Mochizuki.

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A Japanese American boy learns to play baseball as a survival strategy when he is in the relocation camps.  After the war, when he has returned home, playing baseball for his school helps him to survive prejudice.  (Grades 1 to 5)

I Am an American: A True Story of Japanese Internment, by Jerry Stanley.

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A highly personal portrait of Shi Namua, one of the nearly 120,000 Americans of Japanese descent who were evacuated to internment camps.  This book places discriminatory racial laws and segregated California schools in the perspective of wartime jingoism. (Grades 3 and up).

Farewell to Manzanar: A True Story of Japanese American Experience During and After the World War II Internment, by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston.

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This is a beautifully rendered newer edition of a classic autobiography for younger readers.  Jeanne Wakatsuki was seven years old when her family was sent to Manzanar along with 10,000 other Japanese Americans.  The author describes camp life, an attempt by reluctant prisoners to establish a “normal” day to day life by creating schools, Boy and Girl Scout troops, having “sock hops,” cheerleading squads, and all of the trappings of American life outside of the camps.  (Grades 7 and up)

To the Stars: The Autobiography of George Takei, Star Trek’s Mr. Sulu, by George Takei.

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Image via Amazon

Before he became an actor and became well-known for the part of Mr. Sulu on Star Trek, Takei was a young California boy who, with his family, was deported to an internment camp in the Arkansas swamps, and later transferred to another camp in California.  Takei, who has always been a political activist, also discusses his early work on California strawberry farms which helped him to understand issues of migrant labor.  For “Trekkies” or “trekkers,” the book touches on well-known conflicts between Takei and actor William Shatner. (Adult)

Several of the books mentioned in this list are fine selections for book discussion groups.  While many (young) Americans are not even aware of this chapter of American history, it is an important lesson in life on the home front during World War II.

-Written by Lois Gross, Senior Children’s Librarian

The 50th Blog Post: Or Here’s What You Might Want to Check Out for Book Club or Summer Reading

11 Apr

(Fanfare!   Cheers from the crowd!  Huge rounds of applause!)

This is it!  What you’ve been waiting for!  The Hoboken Library’s 50th  post to the Staff Picks Blog.

You may wonder how I earned the great honor of writing this post.  It was competitive, you know.  Ultimately, however, I was the only one who had time, this week, to come up with an entry.

In honor of this occasion, I will NOT share with you a topical list of books on potty training, the death of pets, or any other book topics normally associated with the Children’s Department.  Instead, I will tell you about adult books I occasionally read in what I laughingly refer to as “my spare time,” and when my dog isn’t stepping on my Kindle to prevent me from reading.  These are all works of popular and current fiction (with one notable exception that I’ve been touting as a “must read,” for the past five years).  They reflect my tastes and sensibilities but, honestly, I’ve seldom had anyone tell me that they didn’t like a book I’ve recommended.  As I tell my staff often, the one thing I know how to do is pick good books.   Happy (summer) reading and discussing:

Fallen Women, by Sandra Dallas.

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Having lived in Denver for thirty years, I have a particular love for Sandra Dallas’ books that recall the city’s somewhat wild and wooly past.  And wild it was as the nouveau riche try to hide their sometimes less than sterling pasts with new money made in the mines.  In 1885, Beret Osmundsen, a New York social worker, comes to Denver to claim the body of her younger sister, Lillie, who has been murdered while working as a “soiled dove” on Denver’s infamous Halliday Street.  Beret and Lillie were estranged because Lillie seduced Beret’s easily seducible husband. While staying with her aspirational aunt and uncle, Beret seeks out a detective, Mick McCauley, to help her investigate Lillie’s death and finds that Lillie’s downfall lies dangerously close to home.  Most of Dallas’ books are strictly historical novels, but this one adds an element of suspense that makes the history lesson go down easily.  Read this book if you are a fan of Alice Hoffman or Diana Mott Davidson.

The All-Girl Filling Station’s Last Reunion, by Fannie Flagg.

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Most people associate this author with the book, Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café.  However, Fannie Flagg has had a memorable career both as a writer and as a performer, having come to New York, originally, as the winner of a Celeste Holm look-alike contest.  (I’m sorry.  If you don’t know the name Celeste Holm, search IMDB and then immediately find the film Gentleman’s Agreement to see what a Best Supporting Actress really looks like).   In this book, Ms. Flagg again refers to her native Alabama where we meet Mrs. Sookie Poole who is having a partial nervous breakdown from marrying off the last of her three daughters and dealing with her contentious and more than a bit eccentric mother, Lenore Simmons Krackenberry.  While researching family history, Sookie discovers that her mother does not come from the rich Southern background she has represented, but descends from a mid-western Polish family with a gaggle of beautiful daughters who ran a women’s filling station during World War II, and also served the country as women pilots.  Sookie finds an unexpected connection to Fritzi Jurdabralinski, a feisty aviatrix with a fascinating family story to tell.  Read if you liked The Help or Where the Heart Is.

The Museum of Extraordinary Things, by Alice Hoffman.*

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Coralie Sardie lives and works in a Coney Island freak show.  Born with Syndactyly, a condition that causes her to have webbing between her fingers, her father, a sinister figure, keeps her a virtual prisoner as he displays her as The Mermaid Girl is a giant fish tank in his boardwalk show.  Coralie bonds with other performers in the show and they become a pseudo family, supporting each other in the face of her father’s cruelty.  Then, one night while swimming in the Hudson, Coralie chances on Eddie Cohen, a photographer seeking a new life away from his Orthodox Jewish roots on the Lower East Side. More than just a photographer, Eddie is a sort of “seeker of lost persons,” and becomes embroiled in a search for a missing woman after the horrific Triangle Shirtwaist fire.  With Coralie’s help, Eddie solves the mystery of Hannah, the shirtwaist girl, and also reveals his relationship to the Triangle Fire and the family who owned the factory.  As with all of Alice Hoffman’s books, there is a darkness to this story but also incredible detail and authenticity in the descriptions of early 20th century New York.  The tragedy of the lives of people who can earn a living only by being “freaks” is extremely sad but also inspiring in the way that they support and love one another. Read if you like Neil Gaiman or Isabel Allende.

When She Woke, by Hillary Jordan.

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To me, this is the most thought-provoking book of the last five years.  In a re-imagination of The Scarlet Letter, Jordan tells the story of Hannah Payne, a religiously raised teenager who finds herself pregnant by the powerful head of her fundamentalist church.  In this dystopian world, much of the population has been wiped out by plague, and many more of the females have been rendered sterile.  Abortion is illegal and considered murder so, when Hannah has an abortion and is caught, she is branded a criminal and her skin is genetically altered red so that her crime is obvious to everyone.  Sent to a halfway house for fallen girls, Hannah is abused by her caretakers and leaves with the goal of hooking up with an underground network dedicated to getting “chromes” into Canada.  Along the way, Hannah reunites with her lover and finds that he has feet of clay.  Obviously, the center of this tale is political and feminist and will engender strong feelings on both sides of the issue.  The book also addresses LGBT rights and many other provocative issues that are present in every day’s headlines.  Prepare yourself for a heated discussion, but one of the most engrossing stories, if you choose this book.  Read if you liked The Hunger Games or The Handmaid’s Tale.

The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry, by Gabrielle Zevin.

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This is a Valentine of a book.  A.J. Fikry is the most unexpected of romantic heroes.  He is a curmudgeonly widower living on an isolated New England island and running a bookstore that no one patronizes.  His late wife was the magnet that drew people into the store.  A.J. was merely the man in the back room. However, her death causes him to assume a more active role in the operation of the store and it’s not going well.  Then, one day, a customer leaves A.J. a “package,” a small, bi-racial child who, the mother says, should be raised in a bookstore.  At first, A.J. does everything he can to divest himself of Maya.  However, slowly he is drawn into fatherhood and, by association, into the life of the island town.  He also has an encounter with a sales rep, Amelia, who comes to the island only once a year, but finds herself falling in love with the older, evolving owner of the remote bookstore.  This book will leave you with a warm and mellow feeling about the transformative power of love, family, and community.  Read this book if you like the novels of Elizabeth Berg or enjoyed The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.

Some of these titles may provoke your reading group to have heated discussions, while others may cause more heart-felt consensus about characters, themes, plots, historical accuracy and current events.  Whichever books you choose, I hope you’ll visit the library and ask our staff for further recommendations to expand your reading horizons.  Also, don’t forget that we now have an adult Summer Reading Program, as well as programs to encourage children and young adults to stay in touch with books when school is on recess.  The Hoboken Library is a reading oasis for all of our valued patrons.

-Written by Lois Rubin Gross, Senior Children’s Librarian

*Ed. note: This is the second time a staff member recommended this particular book. That means it must be good. 🙂