The Big War: Under the Blood-Red Sun
Under a warm Hawaiian sun, Tomikazu and Billy are waiting for an early practice with their baseball team, "The Rats," when fighter planes bearing the rising sun of Japan pass low overhead. Horrified, the boys watch as they strafe and bomb U.S. Navy warships in Pearl Harbor, realizing that nothing in their world will ever be the same.
Graham Salisbury's Scott O'Dell Award-winning Under the Blood-Red Sun deals with the violent disruption of life in the tiny fishing community in Oahu where Tomi's foreign-born father and grandfather proudly cherish their Japanese heritage and where the white haoles suddenly regard them as the enemy.
In retribution the Nakaji's fishing boat is sunk, Tomi's father is arrested and deported to a mainland internment camp, his mother loses her job, and Tomi, torn between feelings for his ancestral homeland and his own loyalty to America, is forced to come of age in a time of fear and turmoil in his small community. Although feared, hated, and threatened by some of the white population, Tomi is supported by his friendship with Billy and his multiracial team members. As the war grinds on far from Oahu, Tomi learns to live with his divided loyalties and his divided community and becomes the strength of the Nakaji family.
Tomi Nakaji's story is continued in Salisbury's sequel, House of the Red Fish, in which Tomi and his friends manage to raise his father's fishing boat from the sea and affirm the hope that their lives will go on after the war.
Both of these novels provide a view of the World War II home front quite different from those popular fiction works which portray a nation cheerfully united in the war effort. While this version of the story has truth, it is not the whole truth of that time, and these two noted novels provide a missing piece of that history.
Labels: Japanese-Americans (Grades 4-9), World War II Stories
3 Comments:
Being married to a Japanese lady, believe me when I say that I understand the importance of the Japanese-American interment and racially-based suspicion in looking at WWII, but are there any books for young people on the Pacific theater of operations that does make it the central feature and topic in discussing the war?
By submandave, at 4:41 PM
Well, for starters there are these two well-reviewed books! I'll see what else I can come up with. Check back on this comment section; I'll give you the titles before I do a post on any good ones I find.
Thanks so much for your interest.
By GTC, at 6:14 PM
My mistake, that should read "does not make it the central feature". I was expressing frustration that there seems to be great interest in reducing the entire US experience in the war with Japan to "we locked up innocent people" rather than addressing some more significant events that had greater long-term and historical significance.
Sorry my poor proofreading skills lead to a misunderstanding.
By submandave, at 6:12 PM
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