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Life after Manzanar

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From the editor of the award-winning Children of Manzanar, Heather C. Lindquist, and Edgar Award winner Naomi Hirahara comes a nuanced account of the “Resettlement”: the relatively unexamined period when ordinary people of Japanese ancestry, having been unjustly imprisoned during World War II, were finally released from custody. Given twenty-five dollars and a one-way bus ticket to make a new life, some ventured east to Denver and Chicago to start over, while others returned to Southern California only to face discrimination and an alarming scarcity of housing and jobs. Hirahara and Lindquist weave new and archival oral histories into an engaging narrative that illuminates the lives of former internees in the postwar era, both in struggle and unlikely triumph. Readers will appreciate the painstaking efforts that rebuilding required, and will feel inspired by the activism that led to redress and restitution—and that built a community that even now speaks out against other racist agendas.

208 pages, Hardcover

First published April 3, 2018

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About the author

Naomi Hirahara

58 books758 followers
Naomi Hirahara is the USA Today-bestselling and award-winning author of multiple mystery series, noir short stories, nonfiction history books and one middle-grade novel. Her Edgar Award-winning Mas Arai series features a Los Angeles gardener and Hiroshima survivor. Her first historical mystery, CLARK AND DIVISION, which follows a Japanese American family from Manzanar to Chicago in 1944, won a Mary Higgins Clark Award in 2022. Her two other series star a young mixed race female LAPD bicycle cop, Ellie Rush, and a Filipina-Japanese American woman in Kaua'i, Lellani Santiago. She also has written a middle-grade book, 1001 CRANES. In 2025, the history book she co-wrote with Geraldine Knatz, TERMINAL ISLAND: LOST COMMUNITIES ON AMERICA'S EDGE, won a California Book Award gold medal. She, her husband and their rat terrier live happily in her birthplace of Pasadena, California.

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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
176 reviews
January 18, 2024
In today’s climate of altering history, this book should be required reading on the high school level. Americans cannot alter our history. We are, and always have been, a racist country. Those who are trying to prevent their grandchildren and great-grandchildren from uncovering their racist behaviors will not succeed.
Profile Image for Nicole.
464 reviews4 followers
November 5, 2024
I got curious about Manzanar after reading Properties of Thirst and then Clark and Division. By the same author as the latter, this history tracks what happened to the thousands of Japanese-Americans who were incarcerated in US concentration camps during WWII. It was interesting to hear their stories and how they sought to start new lives after losing everything.

It felt like a lot of detail - I almost wish she took an Isabelle Wilkerson approach and followed the stories of just a handful of people or families, so the reader could really dig into their lives and paths out from Manzanar.

The parts toward the end about the efforts to get historical status (and federal funding) for the Manzanar camp site and to educate Americans about their history, as well as to win reparations, was particularly interesting.
Profile Image for Petrea Burchard.
Author 83 books45 followers
June 2, 2024
I knew, but I didn’t know

The story of the imprisonment of our citizens was familiar to me in the general, historic sense, but the personal stories here, the individuals and their experiences, bring it home. Everyone needs to know.
Profile Image for Mark.
547 reviews57 followers
May 28, 2021
At first glance, this looked like one of those museum gift shop books that is super attractive to look at, but that no one reads. The first section is about how those who survived Manzanar resettled across the United States (although some went to Japan). While the authors provided a useful service by documenting these stories, this part of the book only mildly interested me.

Then the book transforms into the story of the Japanese-American effort to make their version of Japanese internment the officially accepted narrative and to obtain reparation payments It's a remarkable success story, as anyone who has visited the Manzanar National Historical Site can attest. And it was accomplished within the lifetimes of many of those who were incarcerated! That's way better than we've able to do in quashing Lost Causism and acknowledging the true nature of the Confederacy.
Profile Image for Josh.
410 reviews8 followers
June 21, 2022
I stumbled a few months ago across this book in a progressive bookstore in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood in San Francisco, and I read the back cover and knew I wanted to read this. I had visited Manzanar in college and it made huge impression on me. With huge efforts on the parts of politicians to stop teaching history that "offends" and "challenges" white conservative, close-minded people, it's more important that ever to learn about the troubling history of this country even if there are those that would prefer it to be erased from the history books.

This is also a subject I've never really thought much about before. I knew the history that led up to the imprisonment of thousands of Japanese Americans, but I never thought about what came after for all of those that had been held in these camps. This was something I needed to be educated on, and I am so glad I read this informative, interesting, and fascinating book. The trauma for many didn't stop once they left these camps but continued on due to continued anti-Asian racism in the country; the idea of being a model minority and just being quiet; and trying to move on with their lives in an often hostile environment. But, I also saw the strength and resilience of all of these people, many who went onto to do extraordinary things and make an impact on their community and the wider world. These are the stories we don't learn about in school.

I am so glad that I found this book by accident. Something like Manzanar can never happen again!

Profile Image for Lori.
388 reviews24 followers
December 27, 2024
Not a definitive book but an important piece of the history of the incarceration of the Japanese during WWII and what happened afterwards as thousands of Japanese-Americans tried to reintegrate themselves into American life. People didn't talk about this when I was growing up in Northern California. I slowly learned over the years parts of the story. Not the only book out there but it does a good job of describing life after the war, up to today. Some of the photos are missing (probably due to difficulties getting the rights). Otherwise great photos.

I visited Manzanar in the mid-'80s before the reconstructions started. It is a lonely, windy, dry and dusty place in the middle of nowhere. At the time there was one building. LA Water owned the land and required that everything be removed after the war. Manzanar is located in the Owens Valley which LA Water notoriously drained dry (see the movie Chinatown).
6,233 reviews40 followers
April 2, 2025
The book starts off noting that over 120,00 persons of Japanese American descent were forced to move from their homes on the West Coast and go into temporary holding camps and then on to the relocation/incarceration/internment/concentration camps, whichever term you prefer.

It discusses the Manzanar camp and describes the camp and what went on there in fairly good detail. It also notes how many of the males were moved to the Tule Camp camp which was basically a maximum security prison, for their answers on the loyalty test.

It then goes on to cover the closing of the camps and what happened to the people in them, many spreading throughout other states but some trying to return to the West Coast where they had been living. It also covers the redress hearings.

It's a good overall examination of one particular camp and what happened to the people interned there after the camp was closed.
Profile Image for Jessica Biggs.
1,246 reviews20 followers
Read
August 4, 2024
DNF
The pictures in this book are fantastic, and the story itself is one I am very interested in, but unfortunately this book wasn’t what I thought it was. It read as a scholarly paper more than an actual narrative. A lot of facts, but lacked a streamline to connect it, which just left me with information I felt like I could read in an article
Profile Image for Chuck.
533 reviews10 followers
March 12, 2022
“In 1942, the United States government ordered more than 110,000 men, women and children to leave their homes and detained them in remote, military style camps. Two-thirds of them were born in America. Not one was convicted of espionage or sabotage.”
105 reviews
February 25, 2024
This was very hard to read. I felt so bad how we treated the Japanese and Japanese American born. Interesting how the children fared and as adults how they looked back on it. Hope this NEVER happens again.
Profile Image for Sherry Boschert.
14 reviews
July 17, 2018
A fascinating historical account that's pertinent to our times. Freeing people from concentration camps is just the first step in recovery. Let's learn from our past.
Profile Image for Robfen.
19 reviews2 followers
January 21, 2022
The sort of book you need to reread frequently because each page has powerful insights. I benefited tremendously from this book and look forward to referencing often.
Profile Image for Susan.
2,236 reviews19 followers
September 7, 2020
What happened to the Japanese (many of them American citizens) in camps like Manzanar after WWII? One of the many themes the author focused on was the use of language. Were the prisons concentration or internment camps? Were the people in them expelled or incarcerated? Based mainly on extensive oral histories, the book reads like a research report rather than a coherent narrative. It was somewhat disconcerting that the research questions were not posed until the final chapter.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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