Cast out of his native California, "relocated" to an armed camp, and made a victim of almost unbearable family loss, Billy Fujita finds himself in the coldest reaches of Massachusetts in the closing months of World War II. A spirited widow, Margaret Kelly, has helped secure his release in the hope that Fujita, a horticulturist, will turn her barren land into a working farm. Together with Margaret, a war widow named Livvie, and her damaged young son, Garvin, Fujita becomes a reluctant participant in an impromptu family. Providing a profound new perspective on the Japanese-American experience, What the Scarecrow Said is the story of how even in the harshest soil the roots of love and family can survive.
Others have told me that they have experienced what I felt about this book. While at the library, I viewed the flyleaf and thought that this would be a book I would enjoy. After reading for a while, I realized that I had read it previously! That's how memorable it was. It was actually disappointing for me. The whole saga and the characters were unrealistic and did not appeal to me enough to continue again.
I really enjoyed Ikeda's style of prose. I appreciate the slow and thoughtful way that he writes, although I can imagine for some it could be a bit hard to get through. Overall a beautifully crafted story, the characters were easy to connect to and felt realistically written. Appreciated the Author's Note at the end as well.
Reading this book was a bit like a gardener's year in Minnesota......a very long slow start and then things get really interesting and that a big woosh and the season is over. I wish the first half would have moved faster.
My good friend Peter recommended, and I wasn't disappointed. Ikeda's fluid prose created the very compelling backdrop of post-internment/WWII America, and tells the story of a man who was trying to create a life on the East coast. It's masterfully done, and a strong recommendation to anyone looking for a period piece that tells a story we haven't heard very often.
Covers Japanese interment during WWII and affect it had on protagonist. Character development much stronger and characters more interesting than in The Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet. For some reason I can't explain, the first time I picked it up I put it down - the second try was definitely worth the effort.
A well-written good story. I thought the author's notes at the ending were a helpful addition. The author seemed to capture the mood of the times and people so well. I do not care for the where-are-they-now, wrap-it-up type of ending chapters often found in novels and this was not an exception. Overall, though, I thought it was very good.
A story of the Japanese internment camps during WWII - before during and after, including the prejudice towards American Japanese and also kindness and friendships that developed - Kind of long but liked the characters and found the story ( and ending) touching.
I had a hard time with his writing style and so did not finish the book. From the book leaf I thought this is a story I would be interested in but from the few pages I read the story did not intrigue me.
I read, and reread this a second time. It’s definitely a good story and an easy way to revisit our history here in the States; to absorb the contradictions we are taught to overlook at best, to forget or worse to never learn.
It was not what I thought it was going to be. I thought it was going to be a story about life in a war camp in the USA. But it wasn't. It was much more than that.
This novel is so ambitious! The author follows a Japanese family from immigration through success in California through dispersal during WWII to bittersweet reunion after the war years.