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I Am an American: A True Story of Japanese Internment

di Jerry Stanley

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Illustrated with black-and-white photographs. Young Shi Nomura was among the 120,000 American citizens who lost everything when he was sent by the U.S. government to Manzanar, an interment camp in the California desert, simply because he was of Japanese ancestry.
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Prior to WWII, thousands of people of Japanese ancestry lived and worked in the United States. Some, known as Issei, had immigrated from their home country of Japan, while others, known as Nisei, were born in the U. S. and were citizens. Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, government officials began to question the loyalty of all people of Japanese heritage regardless of their citizenship status. Soon after, 120,000 Japanese, two-thirds of whom were Nisei, were forced into internment camps and stripped of their civil rights, despite having committed no crime or broken any law. I Am an American chronicles this internment, focusing on the story of one Japanese American young man, Shiro Nomura, who was a high school student at the time. Shiro had been dating and was in love with a young girl, and they’d planned to be married after graduating, but each of them was sent to a different internment camp. Shiro tried to get transferred to the camp she was in, but by the time they were reunited, her feelings had changed, upending his plans and causing heartbreak.

I Am an American looks at Japanese internment in a broader historical context with regards to the war as well as what it was like for Japanese people both before and following the war. But it also presents a more intimate portrait of Shiro Nomura, as well as his girlfriend, Amy Hattori, and the woman he eventually married, Mary Kageyama. The book presents details of their lives before, during, and after internment, while also talking more generally about what life was like in the internment camps. It also focuses on the racism experienced by Japanese Americans in spite of them going to great lengths to prove their loyalty to their country. Even those who’d served in the U. S. military weren’t exempted from this inhumanity. The only slight misgiving I had with the book was how the author frequently quoted white people who used a racist slur. I commend the author for pointing out that it was a slur, so that kids hopefully won’t get the wrong idea and start using it themselves. I also like that he tried to balance these stories of racism with those of white people who supported Japanese Americans, as well as the fact that he pretty unequivocally expressed the injustice of it all. However, a part of me wonders how a child or teen of Japanese ancestry might feel if reading the book and seeing these slurs. This led me to muse on whether there might have been a way to soften the language a bit, given that even I, as a white adult, felt uncomfortable while reading these quotes. I grudgingly admit, though, that the shock value of it does help drive home how terrible and unjust it was for the Japanese Americans experiencing it. My only other concern, given that this is a book aimed at middle-schoolers and perhaps young teens, is the brief mention of a Japanese man committing suicide when he found out that people like him were to be interned. Otherwise, I think this is a great book for teaching kids and teens about this often overlooked and shameful piece of American history. I learned a number of things while reading it that I didn’t previously know, so I know that it would be informative to young people as well. ( )
  mom2lnb | Oct 15, 2021 |
00015667
  lcslibrarian | Aug 13, 2020 |
This is an excellent source for a personal experience in the camps, specifically Manzanar. It could be used in the classroom to compare and contrast what is learned about the camps in Europe to the camps in the United States.
  AlexisNBlack | Apr 2, 2019 |
I really enjoyed reading this book. It is long so I should start by recommending the age group starting at about 9+ years old.

When World War II was discussed in my upbringing, Japanese internment was never mentioned. I clearly remember the explanation of the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Hitlers intended extermination of Jewish people, and America's entry into the war with Japan and Germany.

This book actually starts out with information of Japanese immigrants prior to World War II and the affects of the Pearl Harbor bombing on Japanese-Americans.

Following the Executive Order 9066, Japanese-Americans were required by law to assemble in groups to be transported away from the California coast and be held against their will indefinitely in ramshackle housing camps; loosing their owned property, houses, vehicles, and money. The only thing they were allowed to bring was whatever they could fit into two suitcases.

This book provides an important piece of history to cover when discussing Hitler's deplorable conduct with Jewish people.
  Scott_Nilson | Oct 9, 2013 |
Young Shi Nomura was among the 120,000 American citizens who lost everything when he was sent by the U.S.government to Manzanar, an interment camp in the California desert, simply because he was of Japanese ancestry. I like that this book shows the struggles and not so good times in American history.
  tfink | Dec 12, 2012 |
Susie Wilde (Children's Literature)
Photojournalist Jerry Stanley proves for a second time that he has an amazing gift for revealing history through individual lives. In this book he focuses on the upheaval that high school senior, Shi Nomura, faces when on the brink of engagement, is forced to spend three years behind the barbed wire of Manznar Relocation Camp. The book is filled with emotionally provocative stories and photos that give a strong sense of what it felt like to live through this period of time. Ages 10 up.
aggiunto da kthomp25 | modificaChildren's Literature, Susie Wilde
 
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To Shi and Mary Nomura, with special thanks to Amy and Tat Mizutani, Mas Okui, and my wife, Dorothy, who suggested the book and pressed for five years until it was written.
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On December 7, 1941, Japanese warplanes bombed the United States Naval Base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
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Illustrated with black-and-white photographs. Young Shi Nomura was among the 120,000 American citizens who lost everything when he was sent by the U.S. government to Manzanar, an interment camp in the California desert, simply because he was of Japanese ancestry.

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