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21st Century Manzanar
 
 
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21st Century Manzanar [Hardcover]

Perry Miyake (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

Price: $22.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

March 2002
When World War III turns into the Economic War with Japan, all-Japanese products, investments, and businesses are banned. When that fails to revive the sinking U.S. economy; old prejudices resurface and turn on anyone of Japanese ancestry. Executive Order 9066 is reinstated and Japanese Americans are ordered to abandon their jobs, homes and property to real Americans and report to internment camps.

Late as usual, David Takeda puts his sister Kate and her family on a train and waits for his brother John so they can report before the deadline to the same internment camp where his parents and grandparents spent WWII—Manzanar. When John is beaten to death by overzealous patriots on the 405 while stuck in traffic, David sees the aftermath on a TV news special report. He makes his way through the gridlocked, gang-controlled Beirut that L.A. has become and eventually reaches Manzanar, where a camp commandant awaits with her own ambitious vision of a final solution.

In the last section of the book, David escapes with other internees through Death Valley and into a Navajo reservation in Arizona, where the escapees undergo a spiritual resurrection from modern America.

A dark portrait of an America gone wrong, Perry Miyake’s debut novel artfully balances a haunting account of psychological and physical survival with serio-comic social observations that are dramatic, humorous, and hopeful. With anti-Japanese sentiment on the rise, from Michael Crichton’s Rising Sun to Jerry Bruckheimer’s summer blockbuster, Pearl Harbor, 21st Century Manzanar is not just an absorbing and provocative novel, but a timely and important one.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Perry Miyake's impressive debut novel writes a compelling, dystopian vision of the 21st century. . . .savagely ironic" -- —Dorinne Kondo, author of About Face: Performing Race in Fashion and Theater

"Read this book while you can still laugh, while it's still satire, and you can appreciate its wisdom." -- —Frank Chin, Award-winning playwright and author of Bulletproof Buddhists and Other Essays

Read this book...while it's still satire, and you can appreciate its wisdom -- Frank Chin, author of Gunga DIn Highway

Savagely ironic...a telling admonition to us all in this post-911 historical moment -- Dorinne Kondo, Director of Asian American Studies, USC

The US government's need for scapegoats takes a chilling twist in Miyake's effective debut novel. -- New and Notable Books, AsianWeek

This book appeals to a much wider audience than [Sanseis]...I enjoyed every page. -- Jennifer Emiko Kuida, Rafu Shimpo, October 30, 2002

From the Publisher

A dark portrait of America gone wrong, Perry Miyake's debut novel artfully balances a haunting account of psychological and physical survival with serio-comic social observations that are dramatic, humorous and hopeful. With war-mentality fear on the rise, 21st Century Manzanar is not just an absorbing and provocative novel, but a timely and important one.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Really Great Books (March 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1893329143
  • ISBN-13: 978-1893329140
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.7 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #605,531 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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4 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Surprisingly beguiling, August 3, 2002
By 
This review is from: 21st Century Manzanar (Hardcover)
I was not predisposed to like this book. My mother is Nisei and spent the war in the camps (and like the author, I had two uncles already serving in the U.S. Army when Pearl Harbor was attacked), but I'm ambivalent about dwelling on the experience, I don't think a similar internment will happen in this country again, and going in, the plot of this book seemed to offer a strong whiff of unseemly paranoia.

But it turns out, given the outrageous premise of fierce economic war between Japan and the U.S., resulting in the revival of Executive Order 9066, and a couple of unbelievable plot turns, that _21st Century Manzanar_ is a surprisingly engaging book. The plot and style shift easily between lyrical reminiscence, action thriller, character studies, and even the somewhat surreal (both drug- and faith-induced).

When the story opens, David Takeda, a Sansei (third generation Japanese-American) in his late 40s from the Venice Beach area, has been reduced to earning his living by delivering eulogies for deceased relations and friends -- their numbers cut down by disease and racist violence. His brother Johnny is beaten to death before they get to Manzanar, in the desert of eastern California, but sister Kate and her children make it to camp. The bulk of the book recreates camp life and the characters' hopes for escape.

Though there is naturally much Japanese-American content (even a 6-page glossary of Japanese and slang terms in the back), this is a highly multicultural novel. David's best friends are a black man and a Hispanic lesbian; also, Miyake significantly plays up the similarities in physiognomy, behavior, and values between Japanese and Southwest Native Americans. In camp one gets to know an alleged half Chinese, half Korean character -- a gay man named Bradley Kuwata, who serves as both a clown and an eventual saviour.

The villains of the story -- particularly a Nurse Ratched-like camp director and a recurring soldier-guard figure -- are a little too unidimensional and caricatured (but this IS a satire), however the "good guys" are complex, ambivalent, and given to fatal changes of mind ... and their body count jarringly high.

Even more surprising, Miyake mixes a fair amount of the lyrical with the profane. This book is not only a love letter to Japanese-Americans (the author reportedly included much of his own family's biographical details in the background of his hero), but also to Los Angeles. There's a strong sense of place in the opening chapters, and Miyake names names and recreates businesses that actually existed and he remembers fondly.

Obviously, anyone with a Japanese background will easily slip into the milieu of this story, but I think even gaijin may find it worthwhile, for its grittiness, detail, and odd shifts of style and perspective.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Journey of Entertainment and Exploration, July 28, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: 21st Century Manzanar (Hardcover)
From Chapter One there is a natural flow to the writing. I came to care about the characters and wondered how I would face these same circumstances if they came to pass. This book opened a world to me that I knew very little about. Perry Miyake's book entertained and educated. He made the reader question and explore their world and at the same time, he kept the reader wondering what the next paragraph would bring.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Vindicated, October 18, 2004
By 
This review is from: 21st Century Manzanar (Hardcover)
This is a wonderful book on lots of levels. The description of growing up in Venice is what I enjoyed the most, the food, the people, the geography, the little tid bits about the language. Venice, and I mean the Venice that the author describes, as opposed to Venice Beach, is a community of many different people -- Japanese Americans, Latinos, African Americans, Whites, and his attempt to capture a sense of that world is honest. The story, about a return to Manzanar due to fall out from economic competition with Japan, is a clever way to relate the point of view of a Sansei, one who never experienced the camps, but who (like any thinking Sansei) has imagined what life was like there, who also must have sensed, if not heard from his parents, the pain, confusion, and general oppression they experienced. Those interested in learning about such a perspective will enjoy and appreciate this book. One only hopes this is the first of many attempts by this author.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
When David Takeda walked through the gates at Manzanar, under the barbed wire, past the guard towers with mounted automatic weapons pointed down and directly at him, into the enclosed compound, and saw the tar-paper barracks, the dirt and dust whipping across the dry, barren yard, the city of Asian faces herded together under the American flag, he freaked. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
temporary relocation center, rites room, terminal ward, credit chips, junior high boys, rec hall, med center, fry bread
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Uncle David, World War, Japanese American, Captain Chung, Father Pete, Santa Monica, Las Vegas, Pearl Harbor, United States, Uncle Greg, Venice High, Asian American, Death Valley, Orange County, Uncle Johnny, Auntie Jenny, Auntie Vic, Chevy Impala, Executive Order, Grandpa Dan, Kenny's Cafe, Nanci Griffith, Stanley Greyhawk, Uncle Mas, Centinela Avenue
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