by Cynthia Kadohata
Published by A Caitlyn Dlouhy Book / Atheneum, 2019
416 pages
ISBN: 978-1-4814-4664-8
Ages 9-13
In 1946, Hanako, 12, and her family arrive in Japan with others who, like her parents, refused to sign a loyalty oath while imprisoned in U.S. internment camps during World War II. Their U.S. military ship lands near devastated Hiroshima. Her grandparents live in the country and are overjoyed to see their son and meet their daughter-in-law and grandchildren, but their spare survival is made more tenuous with Hana’s family to feed. Still, it’s hard for Hana to refuse hungry people who knock at the door asking for food, although the adults tell her she must—there is simply not enough to eat. A boy burned in the Hiroshima bombing and his little sister show up regularly. How can she say no to them? How can she deny her little brother, Akira, who remembers imprisonment as a time when there was always enough food? While the adults work long days, Hana begins attending the village school, longing to feel less like an outsider. Then she faces startling news related to efforts to restore the civil rights of deported Japanese Americans. Hana’s deep feelings and probing thoughts, and singular, memorable characters propel a story that seamlessly weaves history and culture into an aching, beautiful tale of family and refugees and survival, one that also reflects realities playing out for so many children today. An author’s note provides additional information about the history surrounding the story’s events. ©2019 Cooperative Children’s Book Center
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