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Silver Like Dust

One Family's Story of America's Japanese Internment

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The poignant story of a Japanese American woman's journey through one of the most shameful chapters in American history.

Sipping tea by the fire, preparing sushi for the family, or indulgently listening to her husband tell the same story for the hundredth time, Kimi Grant's grandmother, Obaachan, was a missing link to Kimi's Japanese heritage, something she had had a mixed relationship with all her life. Growing up in rural Pennsylvania, all Kimi ever wanted to do was fit in, spurning traditional Japanese cuisine and her grandfather's attempts to teach her the language.

But there was one part of Obaachan's life that had fascinated and haunted Kimi ever since the age of eleven—her gentle yet proud Obaachan had once been a prisoner, along with 112,000 Japanese Americans, for more than five years of her life. Obaachan never spoke of those years, and Kimi's own mother only spoke of it in whispers. It was a source of haji, or shame. But what had really happened to Obaachan, then a young woman, and the thousands of other men, women, and children like her?

Obaachan would meet her husband in the camps and watch her mother die there, too. From the turmoil, racism, and paranoia that sprang up after the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the terrifying train ride to Heart Mountain, to the false promise of V-J Day, Silver Like Dust captures a vital chapter of the Japanese American experience through the journey of one remarkable woman.

Her story is one of thousands, yet it is a powerful testament to the enduring bonds of family and an unusual look at the American dream.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 31, 2011
      Between 1942 and 1945 110,00 people of Japanese descent were sent to internment camps in the U.S. Grant tells the story of her own grandparents, who were “relocated” from their Los Angeles home to Wyoming’s Heart Mountain Relocation Center. Unfortunately, Grant, an English instructor at Penn State and recipient of the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Fellowship in creative nonfiction, has chosen to tell this story in a segmented fashion that fails to cohere; mixing her account of getting to know her grandmother, her grandmother’s revelations of her own history, and tidbits of historical context diminishes emphasis and immediacy. Ultimately, the narrative becomes tedious (“A runner, a woman in an all-pink Nike outfit, approaches on the walking path, and we switch to single file to allow her to pass”) and dissonant (“Rommel ravaged North Africa and marched toward Cairo”).

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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