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Fish for Jimmy

Inspired by One Family's Experience in a Japanese American Internment Camp

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
For two boys in a Japanese American family, everything changed when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and the United States went to war.

With the family forced to leave their home and go to an internment camp, Jimmy loses his appetite. Older brother Taro takes matters into his own hands and, night after night, sneaks out of the camp and catches fresh fish for Jimmy to help make him strong again.
This affecting tale of courage and love is an adaptation of the author's true family story, and includes a letter to readers with more information about the historical background and inspiration.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 18, 2013
      After Pearl Harbor, the U.S. government imprisons Jimmy, his brother, and his Japanese-American parents in an internment camp. Without the fresh food he loves, Jimmy stops eating. Illustrator Yamasaki (Honda: The Boy Who Dreamed of Cars), in her authorial debut, draws from her own ancestral history as she describes the family’s difficulties, yet she resists dropping hints about what’s to come, making the unfolding of older brother Taro’s plan a genuine surprise: “Quiet as a breeze, Taro wrapped the shears he had secretly borrowed from the camp garden in his mother’s scarf.” Once Taro has successfully cut through the camp’s barbed-wire fence, he makes his way through unfamiliar woods in the dark to a stream, where he catches fish for Jimmy. “Mother laughed as Jimmy ate at last. Taro had forgotten the sound of his mother’s laugh, and it was beautiful.” Only the artwork falters; the uncertain perspective and muddy contours of the figures can make the magical-realist elements of Yamasaki’s paintings difficult to parse. Although memoirs of politically sensitive times are often subdued, this one is unexpectedly suspenseful. Ages 6–10.

    • School Library Journal

      April 1, 2013

      Gr 1-3-Following the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Taro's father is taken away for questioning by the FBI, and Taro, his younger brother, and their mother are transported to an internment camp. Jimmy refuses to eat and becomes withdrawn and listless. Taro finds a way to slip outside the camp fences to obtain fresh fish to entice his brother to eat. While the story is moving, it is the acrylic illustrations that are exceptional. The style has a primitive quality, with expressive facial details and body positioning. Yamasaki combines representational and abstract elements in her images. Children will be intrigued immediately by the cover. Taro is picking up fish that have small human figures sleeping on them. Readers soon discover that the figure is Jimmy. By combining what the characters are doing with what they are thinking, the illustrations invite viewers into a deeper level of connection with the story. Space and scale also are used imaginatively. The scene in which Taro leaves the camp is shown as a spread. His movement is demonstrated by four small images of him running, avoiding spotlights and guards. A larger Taro cutting a hole in the fence is the focal point of the painting. Another scene in which Taro is considering how to help Jimmy provides the visual clue of "fish" in an intriguing manner. Although the story is appropriate for a slightly younger audience than Ken Mochizuki's Baseball Saved Us (Lee & Low, 1993) and Eve Bunting's So Far from the Sea (Clarion, 1998), the sophisticated visual images have cross-generational appeal. This book would be appreciated by young children, middle school students learning more about internment camps, and anyone interested in how art can explore emotion.-Lucinda Snyder Whitehurst, St. Christopher's School, Richmond, VA

      Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2013
      Based on her great-grandfather's experience in a Japanese "internment camp," Yamasaki tells how Taro takes care of his younger brother, Jimmy, when he stops eating. Fish has been a mainstay of their diet, but there is none in the camp. Much to his mother's shame and distress, Jimmy simply refuses to eat. Yamasaki's muscular acrylics depict fish swimming through the air all around Jimmy, giving concrete image to his longing. To save his brother's life, at night Taro cuts through the barbed-wire fence, finds a distant stream, catches fish with his hands and returns--thus saving Jimmy's life. Primarily a muralist, Yamasaki tellingly conveys the dangers Taro undergoes in her art, since the camp is guarded by armed soldiers in watch towers, closed in by fences and illuminated by floodlights. Her illustrations also picture people and places, both at home and in internment. A "Dear Reader" note relates a brief history of the evacuation and her family's story, accompanied by archival photographs of the author's family and the Granada Relocation Center in Colorado. A new and moving look at one of the most disgraceful events in U.S. history, effectively told with childlike surrealism. (Picture book. 6-10)

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      April 15, 2013
      Grades 3-5 Taro and his little brother, Jimmy, love swimming in the ocean. It reminds them of their parents, who emigrated from Japan to make a better life in America. However, that dream shatters with the attack on Pearl Harbor. Their father is taken away by the FBI, and shortly thereafter, they, along with their mother, are rounded up and taken to an internment camp. Jimmy, still young enough to be a picky eater, is traumatized and grieves for their father by refusing to eat and longing for the good rice and noodles, fresh vegetables, and fish they used to eat at home. In order to keep his brother healthy, Taro makes a daring escape to find fresh fish. Muralist and debut author Yamasaki has adapted a story from her own family's history in a Colorado camp. Her surreal, vivid, and detailed art, rendered in acrylic on canvas, is rough with emotion and drama, and carries with it the power of familial devotion and love. The final pages include a brief letter to the reader, and some photos of Yamasaki's family.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2013
      Rich, expressive acrylic paintings lend dreamlike imagery to a piece of historical fiction about an all-too-real time. It is 1941, and Taro and his younger brother, Jimmy, live in California with their Japanese-immigrant parents. They have a comfortable life together until the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the subsequent arrest of their father. Soon after, the rest of the family is bused to an internment camp. At the camp, Jimmy stops eating, rejecting the unfamiliar food and longing for the fresh vegetables and fish his mother cooked at home, and Taro decides to take a dangerous risk to save his brother. Varying perspectives create interesting layouts, while rooms morph into landscapes and surrealistic fish seem to swim through the air, bringing symbolic meaning to the full-bleed double-page spreads. An author's note and archival photographs in the back matter provide some history on internment camps and explain that the book is based on a true story from the author's own family history. Endpapers featuring clouds shaped like fish bookend this moving story. julie roach

      (Copyright 2013 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2013
      It's 1941, and Taro and his younger brother, Jimmy, live in California with their Japanese-immigrant parents. Soon after Pearl Harbor, the family is bused to an internment camp where Jimmy stops eating, and Taro decides to take a dangerous risk to save his brother. Rich, expressive acrylic paintings lend dreamlike imagery to a piece of historical fiction about an all-too-real time.

      (Copyright 2013 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.6
  • Lexile® Measure:880
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:3-5

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