
I don't know why I hesitated to read this book, a historical chronicle of true events. Maybe it was the look of it and the size of the font, the textbook quality about it. It was indeed written by a professor at the University of Oregon. However, once I started I was engrossed in the story of the Yasui family. The book chronicles three generations starting with Masuo, a Japanese immigrant, arriving in the United States in 1908. He setttled in Hood River (right up the road from me!) and built an empire around a grocery store and fruit orchards as well as various and numerous other enterprises. He raised a family and worked incredibly hard to become an accepted member of American society and almost believed he had succeeded when World War II began. Anti-Japanese sentiment had been mounting and Pearl Harbor unleashed a flood of racially based discrimination culminating in interment camps throughout the West. Yasui was imprisoned on false grounds of being a dangerous alien spy. Most of his family were sent to camps. The book describes the difficulty of acculturation as it pertains to the Japanese in the U.S. during an ugly period of time. It describes the duality of living a Japanese life at home while being immersed in American culture elsewhere, the close ties and strict boundaries of Japanese family life as opposed to the rights of the individual of the American culture. Great book. It's an 8 (close to 9) for sure.