Afbeelding van de auteur.

James D. Houston (1933–2009)

Auteur van Farewell to Manzanar

26+ Werken 3,235 Leden 49 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

James D. Houston is the author of "Continental Drift" & six other novels, & of several nonfiction works, including "Farewell to Manzanar", coauthored with his wife, Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston. (Publisher Provided) James D. Houston was born in San Francisco, California on November 10, 1933. He toon meer received a bachelor's degree in drama from San Jose State College and a master's degree in American literature at Stanford University. During his lifetime, he wrote nine novels as well as nonfiction books and essays. His works include Bird of Another Heaven, Snow Mountain Passage, and Farewell to Manzanar. His second novel, Gig, won the Joseph Henry Jackson Award for Fiction. He taught writing part-time at numerous universities including the University of California at Santa Cruz, the University of Hawaii, the University of Oregon, the University of Michigan, George Mason University, and San Jose State University. He died due to complications of cancer on April 16, 2009 at the age of 75. (Bowker Author Biography) toon minder
Fotografie: Jana Marcus

Werken van James D. Houston

Farewell to Manzanar (1973) 2,764 exemplaren
Snow Mountain Passage (2001) 222 exemplaren
Bird of Another Heaven (2007) 62 exemplaren
Continental Drift (1978) 30 exemplaren
Hawaiian Son (2013) 20 exemplaren
California heartland: Writing from the Great Central Valley (1978) — Redacteur — 14 exemplaren
The Last Paradise (1998) 8 exemplaren
West Coast Fiction: Modern Writing from California, Oregon, and Washington (1979) — Redacteur; Medewerker — 7 exemplaren
Love Life (1985) 6 exemplaren
Gig (1988) 3 exemplaren
Queen's Journey, A (2011) 3 exemplaren
Eagle Song (1984) 3 exemplaren
Gas Mask 1 exemplaar
California Fiction: The Reader [Fall 1996] (1996) — Medewerker — 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

The Kindness of Strangers (2003) — Medewerker — 200 exemplaren
10th Annual Edition: The Year's Best S-F (1965) — Medewerker — 178 exemplaren
The Ruins of the Earth (1973) — Medewerker — 162 exemplaren
Japan: True Stories of Life on the Road (1998) — Medewerker — 124 exemplaren
Growing up Asian American: An Anthology (1993) — Medewerker — 102 exemplaren
The City, 2000 A.D: Urban Life through Science Fiction (1950) — Medewerker — 63 exemplaren
Racism and Sexism: An Integrated Study (1988) — Medewerker — 62 exemplaren
The Random House Book of Sports Stories (1990) — Medewerker — 45 exemplaren
Unknown California (1985) — Medewerker — 41 exemplaren
California Uncovered: Stories For The 21st Century (2005) — Medewerker — 31 exemplaren
Asian-American Literature: An Anthology (2000) — Medewerker — 30 exemplaren
Big Wave: Stories of Riding the World's Wildest Water (2003) — Medewerker — 14 exemplaren

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Great novel about the Japanese-American experience during World War II. What stook out to me was the honesty. The author tells the story from the perspective of a young girl and doesn't hold back. She goes into detail on how the experience affected her parents and her siblings/herself differently. This novel is a great read for younger students, because it gives a young person's perspective on life during the internment process.
 
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carterberry | 40 andere besprekingen | Feb 5, 2024 |
 
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k6gst | 40 andere besprekingen | Apr 20, 2023 |
Follow Jeanne as she retells her time living in an internment camp during WWII. This story recalls before being at Manzanar Camp, living there, and the impact on life after the camp. A memoir that touches on a part of WWII that isn't often talked about as well as growing up during that time. Reading level appropriate for middle school.
 
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amholland | 40 andere besprekingen | Feb 22, 2023 |
The American concentration camps of World War II where Japanese-Americans were sequestered were not the barbarous places Hitler established. Inmates were not generally abused, much less gassed or turned into soap. But the incident -- a massive violation of the Bill of Rights perpetrated by the executive and approved at the time by the High Court -- left its psychic scars, both on the nation and the hapless people who endured the internment. Mrs. Houston's account -- like the Kikuchi Diary (p. 859) -- provides an intimate picture of one of those camps, Manzanar in California. At the time she and her family entered Manzanar, she was only seven and her recollections are those of a child trying to understand what had happened to her world, trying to comprehend what had turned her father into a rice wine alcoholic (""He was suddenly a man with no rights who looked exactly like the enemy""), trying to cope with the terrible dynamics of a family in disintegration, trying to sort out the ambivalent currents of the Issei-Nisei generational conflict, trying to accept Granny's words, shi kata ga nai (this cannot be helped). It took Mrs. Houston a quarter of a century to unrepress the experience of Manzanar, to admit to herself ""that my own life really began there. . . . Manzanar would always live in my nervous system."" Mrs. Houston survived to write this sad memoir of an American injustice, admittedly, as a friend told her, ""a dead issue."" But like the true stories of all honest survivors, it reminds us that no one -- least of all the innocent -- can escape the indignities of the past.

-Kirkus Review
… (meer)
 
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CDJLibrary | 40 andere besprekingen | Jan 24, 2023 |

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Statistieken

Werken
26
Ook door
13
Leden
3,235
Populariteit
#7,906
Waardering
½ 3.7
Besprekingen
49
ISBNs
81
Talen
2

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