Ratings30
Average rating4.5
Terms I needed to look up and their meanings, because I didn't realize the author had a glossary in the back:
Nikkei: of Japanese lineage (literally) and often used to refer to Japanese people who emigrated from Japan and their descendants
Nisei: a person born in the US or Canada whose parents were immigrants from Japan
Issei: first generation Japanese immigrants to countries in North America and South America
(Thanks Wikipedia for spelling this out for me: issei are born in Japan; their children born in the new country are nisei (ni, “two”, plus sei, “generation”); their grandchildren are sansei (san, “three”, plus sei, “generation”). )
I think it's interesting – fitting – that the main character has a Japanese first name with an American last name while many that she is surrounded by have American first names and Japanese surnames.
This made me cry. I have a soft heart for this period of history. A building in my hometown has a plaque talking about how the building was returned to the Japanese family after their period of displacement. I regret what my country did out of fear and incensed that it then has the nerve to turn around and use it to support the model minority myth.
I really liked how Kiku talks to her mother after her experience and puts her experience into action.
This was well written and I like the art.
Only one little thing niggled me: this teenager in around 2016 had a grandmother who was a teenager in the early-mid 1940's. Huh, I dunno how that generational math works. But it helps a little that the book mentions that Kiku's mom was the youngest of four and I guess it's possible that Kiku's mom had her later in life but it does stretch my suspension of disbelief as she dropped out of college in the 70's and Kiku is born around early 2000's. It doesn't matter to the story, it's just something I had to get out of my brain
It was interesting to read two books focusing on the Japanese internment at the same time. They were very different from each other, this one being more of a novel than a history text. What I liked most about this book was how Kiku realizes the reason why she doesn't know how to read or speak Japanese or has participated in Japanese culture was because of the distance her grandmother had put between her family and those things due to being in the camps and Kiku's mother continued the distance herself. You can clearly see the ripple effect the camps had on Issei and Nissei in America. It was strangely, something I never considered when I wondered why my Bachan spoke Japanese to others her age, but never really to my mom and her siblings or us. Just another thing to be sad about and work to change.
A touching story about the incarceration of Japanese Americans in the US after World War II.
Although the artwork's stunning, the main ability of the character was never explained. Which felt a little odd to me. Why not just tell the history of your people without elaborate plot points to make it interesting?
A decent read though.
A very honest, heartfelt, and personal look at internment. They way fiction and nonfiction were blended helped to craft a reading experience that invited the reader to think about how the experience of internment impacted individuals and generation one far beyond the closing of the camps. The book also had a list of resources at the end so readers could further their education if they wished.
A mix of sci-fi interwoven with actual history about Japanese internment in the US after Pearl Harbor. Hard to read about but something I unfortunately have read all too little about. Great color palette.
It makes sense that Hughes thanks Octavia Butler in the end as this book owes a huge debt to Kindred. It's not a bad thing in any way, I think the time travel/displacement really works here as well. I loved the exploration of family trauma as something that isn't explored for various reasons and that Kiku and her mother both had these experiences. I thought the art was great as well - Hughes captured facial expressions really well even within her style.
I absolutely loved this graphic novel!!! I definitely recommend it to anyone who is interested in reading and learning a bit about Japanese interment camps in america. I loved how hughes interweaves fiction and reality and makes the story easy to understand. They inserted their own family history with a fantastical twist. Also it's a lil queer :) PLEASE READ THIS BEAUTY WHEN IT COMES OUT!!
I absolutely loved this graphic novel!!! I definitely recommend it to anyone who is interested in reading and learning a bit about Japanese interment camps in america. I loved how hughes interweaves fiction and reality and makes the story easy to understand. They inserted their own family history with a fantastical twist. Also it's a lil queer :) PLEASE READ THIS BEAUTY WHEN IT COMES OUT!!