Showing posts with label Japanese Internment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japanese Internment. Show all posts

Friday, August 2, 2013

Barbed Wire Baseball







Barbed Wire Baseball        Written By Marissa Moss     Illustrated By Yuko Shimizu      2013

Abrams Books For Young Readers




Brilliant, brilliant book that presents a fascinating story that is little known.


The subject of the book is Kenichi Zeni Zenimura (1900-1968). He is considered the father of Japanese-American baseball, and he also popularized the game in postwar Japan. Zenimura was an extraordinarily talented player who played all nine positions. He pitched right handed, but he bat left handed.

Zenimura was born in Japan, and he moved to Hawaii when he was 8 years old. There, he fell in love with baseball. After he graduated from school, he moved to Fresno and formed a baseball team. In October of 1927, he was one of four Japanese–American players picked to play in an exhibition game with the Yankees in Fresno. There is a photo of Zenimura standing in between Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig that is reproduced in the artwork of the book. The actual photo appears in the afterword.

When he was interred at the Gila River camp, Zenimura began to covertly build a baseball field at the camp. When his efforts escalated to the point that he was going out under the cover of night to steal wooden posts from the camp fence so that he could build bleachers for the field, the camp guards noticed. However, they observed that he we only taking every other post, and thus leaving the structural integrity of the fence intact. The guards did not raise the alarm. They quietly watched Zenimura. Eventually, their position moved from quiet acquiescence to providing assistance to the effort.

As Zemimuras efforts grew, more and more of the camp got involved. They pitched in to help weed the field, level it, plant grass, make uniforms, and they become players and spectators.


I am especially impressed by the insight that is offered in the artists note in the back of the book. I am always fascinated by the way that the real, the imagined, and the fanciful all interact and come together when non fiction stories are recounted in picture books. This illustrators notes are highly unusual because they present this interaction as its central theme.

The artist notes that while barbed wire was present at the early stages of the camp, it was later removed. He decided to maintain it in the illustrations in order to stress the fact that the camp was indeed a prison for those who were held there.

There are almost no photos of Zenimura during his concentration camp years. Actually there is one that was shot from distance in order to show the field. Zenimura and son appear in this photo, but the distance is too far to make out their features. The artist had to use photos of Zenimura from before the war to provide the model for his face.

I also appreciate the fact that the artist shares with us that while he did extensive research on the Gila River camp in order to depict it accurately, he also used photos from other camps in creating the art.

He could not find any visual images of the teams’ uniforms, so he adapted a homemade uniform from the period as a pattern, and he applied a bit of artistic imagination.

It is all too rare that we get such insights into how the creative process informs the depiction of nonfiction presentations.



The art is extraordinarily striking. Very stark and engaging, and yet with a fantastic range of expression preserved. There are elements of collage, older Japanese art styles, and a hint of Chinese propaganda poster style. The effect is very visually impactful, and it brings home the fact that this is a prison camp being depicted.

In emphasizing the starkness of the camp, the art highlights the humanity of the people held within.

Highest possible recommendation!

By all means, use in conjunction with My Dog Teny .



Zenimura standing between Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth



My Dog Teny







My Dog Teny     By Yoshito Wayne Osaki,   Illustrated by Felicia Hoshino

Published by the Japanese Cultural and Community Center of Northern California 2010



Locally published, yet hard to get. It is not available through any of our usual book vendors, nor does Amazon carry it. My local neighborhood book store cannot special order this title. However, you can check out a copy through the SFPL. You can also purchase a copy directly from the Japanese Cultural and Community Center of Northern California. It is available both online and at the center in Japan Town.

This book needs a wider distribution!

This is a true story that was experienced by the author. It first appeared in a collection of short stories published by the JCCCNC in 2001 under the title Our Side of the Fence .  That version of the story ended when the author (a young boy at the time) was forced to part with his dog in 1942 when he was shipped to the Tule Lake concentration camp.

Fast forward to 2010 – the son of the picks up the story and updates it with subsequent events in the form of a picture book.


The story is as follows. When Wayne was a boy, his father gave him a puppy, which he promptly named Teny. Wayne and Teny were inseparable, and they were each others best friends. When the internment order was issued, Wayne was dismayed to find out that pets were not allowed in the internment camps. Since they could find no one willing to take care of a pet that was from a Japanese household, they simply had to abandon Teny.

In a heart rending sequence, Teny grows sad and despondent a few days before the family had to go to the camp. The author (the boy in the story) thinks that Teny somehow picked on the fact that he would be left behind. A day before leaving, Teny disappeared, and although Wayne looked everywhere for him, he couldnt find him.

The next day, as Wayne climbs into the bed of the army truck that has come to take him to the internment camp, he gets on top of the baggage in order to try to see Teny one last time.  As the truck leaves and picks up speed, Teny bolts out from nowhere and attempts to catch up with Wayne. After about a mile, Teny is exuasted and can no longer keep up. That was the last time Wayne saw Teny.

Wayne spent the next 4 years at the Tule Lake (N. California) camp, and afterwards, he became an architect. After 49 years, he retired. Though his family wanted to send him on a trip to Japan or a cruise, all Wayne really wanted was another dog.

His family rescued an abandoned dog and gave it to Wayne. He promptly named him Teny.


Simply superlative! This book gets the highest recommendation possible from me. 

It would be a fantastic way to introduce students to this dark, and still very relevant part of our history. 

If you can, by all means secure a copy.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Fred Korematsu: All American Hero


Fred Korematsu: All American Hero 

Fred Korematsu: All American Hero    By Anupam Chander & Madhavi Sunder

Art by Angelia Loi                  Published in 2011         96 Pages

This GN History was written by two UC Davis Law professors in order to explain
the 40 year fight for justice that Fred Korematsu faced when he challenged the
internment of Japanese Americans.

Korematsu refused to comply with the internment order, and when he was apprehended,
he challenged the basis for the order. He was convicted, and when his case went to the
Supreme Court, the court upheld both his conviction and the legal basis for the
internment order.

It took 40 more years to get his conviction overturned and to get the government to admit
that the interment order was unjustified.

The authors frame the telling of Korematsu's story through the eyes of a young Muslim
girl who is incessantly taunted in the aftermath of 911. An elderly Japanese neighbor
comforts her by sharing the fact that similar sentiments led to her internment, and then
she tells the girl the story of how Fred Korematsu fought for the rights of all Americans.

Additionally, the art is charming. It looks like it could have been drawn by a kid, and in my
opinion, this increases the engagement for the reader.

There is an interview with the authors at the following link. Their section starts at 15:31.

http://www.capradio.org/157633

 The format of the book is small, but I have used it for an abridged read aloud.

We also have a local connection. Fred Korematsu lived in Oakland.