Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston recalls her childhood at a Japanese incarceration camp in this engrossing memoir that has become a staple of curriculum in schools and on campuses across the country. This special 50th-anniversary edition features a new cover, a foreword by New York Times bestselling and acclaimed author Traci Chee, and photographs of life at the camp by Toyo Miyatake.
During World War II the incarceration camp called Manzanar was hastily created in the high mountain desert country of California, east of the Sierras. Its purpose? To house thousands of Japanese Americans.
In Farewell to Manzanar, Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston recalls life at Manzanar through the eyes of the child she was and the experiences of her family. She relays the mundane and remarkable details of daily life during an extraordinary period of American history: The wartime imprisonment of civilians, most native-born Americans, in their own country, without trial, and by their fellow Americans.
She tells of her fear, confusion, and bewilderment as well as the dignity and resourcefulness of people in oppressive and demeaning circumstances. Jeanne delivers a powerful first-person account that reveals her search for the meaning of Manzanar.
Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston (1934-2024) was born in Inglewood, California. At age seven, she and her family were forced from their home by the U.S. government, along with more than 110,000 other Japanese American citizens and immigrants ineligible for citizenship during World War II. The family spent three and a half years at Manzanar in California. She went on to study sociology and journalism at San Jose State University, where she met her husband and cowriter of her memoir Farewell to Manzanar, James D. Houston. The Houstons' teleplay for the NBC television drama based on Farewell to Manzanar was nominated for an Emmy Award in 1976 and received the prestigious Humanitas Prize in 1977. Jeanne's widely anthologized essays and short stories were first collected in Beyond Manzanar: Views of Asian American Womanhood. Her works have earned numerous honors, including a United States-Japan Cultural Exchange Fellowship; a Rockefeller Foundation residence at Bellagio, Italy; and a 1984 Wonder Woman Award, given to women over forty who have made outstanding achievements in pursuit of truth and positive social change. In 2000, Jeanne was acknowledged by the City of Los Angeles Japanese American community and named Grand Marshal of the Nisei Week Parade. In 2019, she was inducted into the California Hall of Fame, which celebrates the Golden State's legends and trailblazers whose achievements have made history and changed the state, the nation, and the world.
James D. Houston (1933-2009) was the author of several novels and nonfiction works exploring the history and cultures of the western United States and the Asia/Pacific region. His works include Snow Mountain Passage, Continental Drift, In the Ring of Fire: A Pacific Basin Journey, and The Last Paradise, which received a 1999 American Book Award for fiction. A former Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford, Jim received a National Endowment for the Arts writing grant and a Library of Congress Story Award and traveled to Asia lecturing for the USIS Arts America program.
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The Kitchen Sisters (Davia Nelson & Nikki Silva), producers of NPR's The Keepers, Hidden Kitchens, Hidden World of Girls & The Kitchen Sisters Present podcast
Akemi, artist Howard Ikemoto, Berkeley graduate Tami Takahashi, Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, author of “Farewell to Manzanar,” Jimi Yamaichi of @JAMsjOfficial & @GeorgeTakei talk about how the internment forever re-shaped their lives, their food, their family https://t.co/CYU6xD0PFP https://t.co/fMeyIDU2HF
A graphic view of life inside the Circulation Department at your library. No books were harmed in the making of this comic!
@LibnOfCongress @librarycongress 2 great books: Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston & They Called Us Enemy by George Takei
"A poignant memoir from a Japanese American. . . . Told without bitterness, her story reflects the triumph of the human spirit during an extraordinary episode in American history." -- Library Journal
"[Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston] describes vividly the life in the camp and the humiliations suffered by the detainees... A sober and moving personal account." -- Publishers Weekly