What can I possibly say about FINDING MOON RABBIT that has not been said already? I absolutely love a well-researched and well-written piece of historical fiction.
“A lone mountain rises out of nowhere with a top shaped like a cowboy hat.
There will be no soft pillows for our heads. No warm baths. No tasty food. I feel something draining from me…
Maybe it’s gaman.”
With those early lines spoken by the story’s central character, Kokoro Marie Hayashi, J.C. Kato and her daughter JC2 capture the thoughts, fears, and concerns of the over 120,000 Japanese Americans who were displaced from their homes and interned in concentration camps during WWII. It is a part of our history that has been kept out of our history books for quite some time and as a consequence not many Americans know too much about.
With the sweep of his presidential pen, Roosevelt authorized Executive Order 9066, issued two months after Imperial Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. That order turned the lives of those Japanese Americans residing on the West Coast completely upside down. About 80,000 of those impacted were Nisei (second generation American-born Japanese with U.S. citizenship) and Sansei (third generation, the children of Nisei).
The authors selected the Heart Mountain War Relocation Center as the setting for their heartfelt story. Heart Mountain was one of ten concentration camps used for the internment of Japanese Americans at the time, and the place where the only Caucasian, American artist Estelle Peck Ishigo, was interned with her Japanese husband Arthur Ishigo. The camp’s 650 military-style barracks housed a total of 13,997 Japanese Americans until the camp’s closure on November 10, 1945.
Finding Moon Rabbit is an enthralling story that is easy to read and moves along at a rapid pace. I would highly recommend it not only for the younger readers, but also for the adults who missed out on learning about what America did to its citizens during the time of war. Educational and entertaining from start to finish, the book will be difficult to put down.