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Like a Willow Tree, by Rei Kimura

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A willow tree, soft and flowy on the outside, unbreakable and strong on the inside, left to brave the lashings and extremities of wind and storm but never quite breaking. Hanako Ishigaki was just 9 years old when her father decided to uproot the family from traditional and beautiful Kyoto and migrate to Hawaii. ‘You are not uprooting this family to some strange outlandish place where we will have to start all over again and maybe never be accepted,’ his wife ranted. ‘Why, Kazuo? Why? We are Japanese and we should live here till the day we die.’ But this was one time Kazuo Ishigaki refused to budge. We follow Hanako’s arduous journey to Hawaii on a passenger liner and the shock of finding no one waiting for them there. By a sheer stroke of luck, if one could call it that, the Ishigaki family, used to much better times and lives, ended up in Kauia Island in a Japanese settlement called Furusato to work in a sugar plantation alongside thousands of Japanese migrants. The book describes the colorful lives of the Japanese migrant community in Hawaii in the eyes of the young Hanako and the conflict of two cultures, east and west. How eventually did Hanako end up in the big city, Honolulu, where she was to meet James Robertson and start a love affair that was to span and survive 35 years of separation, war and betrayals to end one cold afternoon in a sterile hospital room where the loose ends of two people’s lives and passion finally came together to find closure. And then, one day, at the peak of the post Pearl Harbor backlash on Japanese Americans, when Hanako thought that living behind barbed wires at the Japanese American internment camp of Manzaner, they had hit rock bottom, there was that dreaded knock on the front door and a soldier served a deportation order to Japan on them….. This story is told against a gripping backdrop of war and the horrors and humiliations of the Japanese American war internment camps following Pearl Harbor. But even in the most dire and hopeless circumstances people can dream and Hanako and her best friend, Melanie Tanaka dreamt of pitching their unusual talent in fashion designing into the world of haute couture and high fashion. The odds against them were as unscalable as Mount Fuji in winter but dreams were free…. As the overcrowded ship carrying hundreds of deportees labeled ‘enemy aliens’ approached the shores of Japan, Hanako told herself firmly. ‘We’re going to be all right here, I’m sure of that!’ Was she right? Or would things get really bad before they became better? So many things happened to shake and test the strength of this willow tree that readers may ask how did she continue to get up after each blow? This book is based on the true story of the turbulent life of Hanako Ishigaki as she was tossed around by the winds of migration, war internment camps and an incredibly unlikely and impossible love affair woven into it to add poignance to a story of great courage and determination to survive and succeed against all odds. How will it end?
- Sales Rank: #8349965 in Books
- Published on: 2015-10-22
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.00" h x .62" w x 5.00" l, .60 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 246 pages
About the Author
Rei Kimura is a lawyer with a passion for writing about unique events and personalities. She has adopted an interesting style of creating stories around true events and the lives of real people in a number of her books, believing that is the best way of making hidden historical events and people come alive for 21st century readers. With this objective in mind, Rei has touched on historical events like the horrific sinking of the Awa Maru and the Kamikaze pilots of World War II and woven them into touching stories of the people who lived and died through these events.Then there are stories of courage, love and rejection beautifully portrayed in “Butterfly In the Wind” a story of the concubine of Townsend Harris, first American consul to Japan, set against the colorful and turbulent era of the Black Ships. This book has touched the hearts of many and been translated into languages from Spanish, Polish, Russian, Dutch to Thai, Hindi, Indonesian, Marathi.Rei's writing also touches on interesting issues like that raised in “Japanese Magnolia” a book based on the true story of two men, a samurai and a peasant who dared to cross two forbidden areas in feudal Japan, that of homosexuality and a class society “so sharply defined it cut like a knife.”Other controversial stories she has written include “Japanese Rose” a book which asked the question was there ever a Japanese female kamikaze pilot in the Second World War?But it's not all history and culture, she also writes on contemporary events like “Aum Shinrikyo-Japan’s Unholy Sect” an expose of the 1995 sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway.Occasionally, her love for animals and sense of humor surfaces in this very heart warming and delightful story of a rogue Pomeranian dog, “My Name is Eric,” a complete departure from Rei’s normal story lines but nevertheless, a refreshing one! Kimura considers her writing as part of the perennial quest for truth, challenge and fulfillment.Her books have been translated into various Asian and European languages and widely read all over the world. Apart from being a lawyer, Rei Kimura is also a qualified freelance journalist and is associated with the Australian News Syndicate.
Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Another steller Book
By onewac
Like Japanese Rose, this book held my interest and I couldn't put it down. Can't wait for another book.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Good historical fiction
By Nature Lover2
I am very fond of historical fiction and Like a Willow Tree is an engaging work set in the pre- and post-World War II era in both Japan and America. This love story is primarily told from the experiences of Japanese-American citizens who were not only interred during the war but for some, like the Ishigaki family, deported back to Japan. And although the Ishigaki family was Nikkei (that is, originally from Japan with long term visas), some of the families that were deported were Sansei or 1st and 2nd generation English-speaking Japanese-Americans who felt like foreigners when they were forcibly returned to their ancestral homeland. The author does a great job of defining for the reader the inner conflict of the protagonists who had to choose, during the war, between their allegiance to one country over the other, when both countries had customs and cultures that were endearing to them. And throughout the book, the parallel of cultural similarities and differences was skillfully conveyed. Racial prejudice, of course, was on display at every level in the US including the Asian community where the Chinese sought to separate themselves from the Japanese all the way up to the highest level of the US government. I enjoyed the book and would recommend it as a good read. So why the three (3) stars?
There were parts of the book where the writing was exceptional but I was disappointed by the many typographical errors that I found, as if Oak Tree Press did not bother to proof-read or edit the material. I could cite a number of examples but a few include "new York", "fare for the word far", and the non-word "acand" (which by the way I was never able to reason the intent). Also on a couple of occasions, several lines of text were missing (e.g., at the beginning of Chapter 23). I don't know if this is an issue of "translating the text to the digital Kindle" (as it has happened with other Kindle books) or if this too is poor editing. However, I am willing to risk purchasing a second title by Rei Kamura but if editing continues to be sloppy, I doubt I'll be looking to read any more of her works.
Finally, when the book shifts to approximately 35 years after WWII, the lead characters are using cell phones for international calls, and this is when the credibility is lost. While the cell phone was introduced as early as 1973, by the early 1980's they were still these huge bulky copies of landline phones and did not have the capability for international calls. The first multi-band (capable of roaming in different countries) cell phone was introduced by Motorola in 1999, some 50 years after the war ended.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
needs more editing
By ishibob
The author needs to do more research. Altough a fiction, there is no need to twist the facts on such a sensitive subject. There were no mass relocation from Hawaii to Manzanar. Especially from Kauai. Also the ocean between Japan/Hawaii and the US is the Pacific, not the Atlantic. eg. transatlantic phone calls, traveling on the Atlantic by ship from Hawaii to Japan etc.
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