“The Literature of Japanese American Incarceration” published today as a Penguin Classic

cover of Penguin anthologyThe Literature of Japanese American Incarceration hits bookstore shelves today. You will finally be able to walk into a shop and buy a copy to take home. With their iconic black-and-white-and-orange covers, everyone has read or seen a Penguin Classic at some point in their lifetime. Whenever a character carries one in a movie, it’s a visual shorthand to signal the character is a scholar or book nerd.

That’s why it’s still astonishing to me to have assembled such a volume for the imprint with Floyd Cheung. In the words of Seattle Times reviewer Paul Constant, “The Classics line has democratized quality literature for over 75 years, putting affordable paperback editions of the most important stories in human history in the hands of millions of readers. In addition to celebrating the best writers in history, Penguin Classics also publishes anthologies contextualizing important historical periods for a modern audience through titles like “The Portable Nineteenth-Century African-American Women Writers” and “The Women‘s Suffrage Movement.” A new Penguin Classics release, “The Literature of Japanese American Incarceration,” will undoubtedly serve as a seminal text for generations of students learning about the United States government’s incarceration of 125,000 Japanese Americans during World War II.”

group selfieWe owe our inclusion in this long-running series to our editor and publisher Elda Rotor and what Floyd calls “her vision for a more diverse Penguin Classics.”  To prepare for this moment, we met in November with Elda at her Penguin Random House headquarters in New York City, where she took what she called a “Filipino selfie” with our publicist Becca Stevenson on the left, flanked by her manager Rebecca Marsh. The three of them have worked since then to expose our book to the widest possible audience, through the news media and personal appearances.

REVIEWS AND INTERVIEWS

SEATTLE, WA
Wednesday, May 15, 2024, 11:00 am
New Day Northwest
KING-TV 

tv logoAn interview on Seattle’s premier morning television talk show to launch The Literature of Japanese American Incarceration. Thanks to producer Joseph Suttner for reaching out to book me; his grandmother he says was in camp too.

Seattle Times print review

We have more interviews and reviews in the pipeline, including NPR’s Here and Now, LitHub, the Pacific Citizen, the Journal of Asian American Studies, and more. If you are able to review the book for your favored outlet, please contact Becca Stevenson at Viking/Penguin Publicity [[email protected]} for a review copy.

Alta Journal logoAlta Journal, May 13, 2024
Executive Disorder,”
review by books editor David Ulin

Seattle Times logoThe Seattle Times, May 7, 2024
New anthology highlights Japanese American incarceration literature,”
review/interview by Paul Constant

International Examiner logoInternational Examiner, May 1, 2024
Landmark Penguin anthology brings to light the multifaceted literature of Japanese American incarceration,” review by Ana Tanaka

Booklist graphicBooklist: the book review journal of the American Library Association,
March 15, 2024
The Literature of Japanese American Incarceration,”
review by Terry Hong

BOOK EVENTS

We have book launches lined up in Seattle, Portland, and Massachusetts, and are working on events in San Francisco and Los Angeles. If you are interested in having Floyd or I present the book in your city, please contact us.

SEATTLE, WA
Thursday, May 16, 2024, 7:00 pm
Book launch for The Literature of Japanese American Incarceration
Elliott Bay Book Company, 1521 10th Avenue

photos of Frank Abe and Karen Maeda AllmanBook maven Karen Maeda Allman will host me in conversation for the official launch of the new anthology from Penguin Classics. We will be joined by the families and friends of several of the locally based authors who contributed to the volume. Look for the event page to come here.

PORTLAND, OR
Saturday, May 18, 2024, 1:00 pm
Book launch for The Literature of Japanese American Incarceration
Japanese American Museum of Oregon
man with arms foldedOne Pacific Square, 220 NW 2nd, first floor conference room

Portland launch for the new anthology from Penguin Classics, in conversation with Emily Teraoka of the Manzanar National Historic Site. We will be joined by the families and friends of the locally based authors who contributed to the volume. Free registration here.

SOUTH HADLEY, MA
Thursday, May 23, 2024, 7:00 pm
Odyssey Bookshop
9 College Street

book cover with manEast Coast launch for the new anthology from Penguin Classics, featuring co-editor Floyd Cheung. Free Eventbrite registration here.

Video livestream: Three short films on the Heart Mountain resisters

May 11, 2024 will be the 22nd anniversary of National JACL’s apology in 2002 to what Paul Tsuneishi liked to call the “resisters of conscience.” To mark the occasion, Kimiko Marr and Japanese American Memorial Pilgrimages are producing a video livestream this Tuesday, May 14th, at 5:00 pm PDT/ 8:00 pm EDT that I’ve agreed to host.  Continue reading Video livestream: Three short films on the Heart Mountain resisters

Mystery writers honor John Okada at Left Coast Crime convention

posterIn addition to the presentation of awards for best new mysteries, the writers and fans at the annual Left Coast Crime convention. also recognize a “Ghost of Honor,” someone who is no longer with us who inspires them. For their 2024 Seattle Shakedown convention in Bellevue, the writers and fans recognized novelist John Okada in his centennial year as their Ghost of Honor. Continue reading Mystery writers honor John Okada at Left Coast Crime convention

Now online: the Fair Play Committee files from the National Archives

This year we observe the 80th anniversary of the trial of 63 members of the Fair Play Committee at Heart Mountain for draft resistance, and the subsequent trial of the FPC steering committee for conspiracy to counsel draft evasion. Now, thanks to six years of work by staff of the Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation, we are able to view online the personal WRA files kept on those members of the largest organized resistance to incarceration, the story documented in our PBS film, Conscience and the Constitution. You can see the files by opening the box below:

Heart Mountain Draft Resisters


Continue reading Now online: the Fair Play Committee files from the National Archives

Audiobook and table of contents for Penguin anthology

fire circle with men silhouetted inside a canvas tent
The square artwork for the audiobook version of “The Literature of Japanese American Incarceration.”

I could not believe there would be interest in an audiobook of our anthology of camp literature coming May 14, but as a Facebook friend pointed out, having a set of audio readings is not just entertainment for long road trips or jogging with earbuds, but an essential access for the visually impaired. Continue reading Audiobook and table of contents for Penguin anthology

Five Events for the 2024 Day of Remembrance

Who knew when we started the Day of Remembrance that I’d still be talking about it 45 years later. Nevertheless, here we are, hitting the road for five DOR events in 2024. For further updates as the month progresses, check the Events page.
Continue reading Five Events for the 2024 Day of Remembrance

New animation puts drawings of “We Hereby Refuse” into motion

book coverAfter two years in the making, congratulations to Shannon Gee and her team at the Seattle Channel for producing this animation of the Jim Akutsu story from We Hereby Refuse.

The 14-minute video makes its cable-tv debut tonight at 7:00 pm as part of their award-winning “Community Stories” series. The animation very cleverly adds motion to the drawings of Ross Ishikawa in capturing just the first part of the Akutsu story from the arrest of his father up to the family’s arrival at the Puyallup Assembly Center, with a full rundown of the JACL collaboration that Jim detested.
Continue reading New animation puts drawings of “We Hereby Refuse” into motion

Project to translate and republish the literary magazines of Tule Lake

Tule Lake is the final frontier for the study of Japanese American incarceration. After 80 years, the Segregation Center at Tule Lake remains the least-understood and most-avoided subject in polite Japanese American society. And the fiction and poetry written by the Issei and Kibei Nisei during this tumultuous period and published in the camp’s literary magazines has languished unread by those who can’t read Japanese. A new project launched last month at the University of California at Berkeley promises to change that. Continue reading Project to translate and republish the literary magazines of Tule Lake

Evoking the Postwar Seattle Chinatown of John Okada

two buildings
A slide from the presentation of Dr. Marie Rose Wong

THERE ARE STORES on King Street, which is one block to the south of Jackson Street. Over the stores are hotels housed in ugly structures of brick more black than red with age and neglect. Continue reading Evoking the Postwar Seattle Chinatown of John Okada

From Page to Stage: Adapting NO-NO BOY for Today’s Theater

Photo: Elaine Ikoma Ko

Many thanks to Seattle Rep Literary Manager and Dramaturg Paul Adolphsen for so expertly leading the October 24 panel on our work to adapt John Okada’s No-No Boy for the theater. This was the second in the series of panels I’ve been curating for the Seattle Public Library on the occasion of the John Okada Centennial.
Continue reading From Page to Stage: Adapting NO-NO BOY for Today’s Theater

The history and literature of Japanese American resistance to wartime incarceration