Tag Archives: Julie Otsuka

The Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka

Almost 10 years after Julie Otsuka made her spectacular literary debut with When the Emperor Was Divine, I remain even more convinced that Emperor is the best book I’ve ever read about the Japanese American imprisonment during World War II. Truth be told, Emperor ranks so high on my personal list of all-time revered titles that I felt unable to read Otsuka’s latest for many months; the thought that I might have another near-decade to wait for her next title haunts me still.

The Buddha in the Attic – recently named a 2011 National Book Award finalist – is another masterpiece. Otsuka distills nearly a half century of history into 129 exquisite pages of powerful intensity; like the very best poetry, every page has been reduced to the most essential details, moments, phrases, memories. Using a chorus-like ‘we,’ Otsuka’s eight spare chapters are chant-like revelations of the Japanese American experience.

“On the boat we were mostly virgins,” Otsuka begins, capturing Japanese picture brides early in the last century, traveling to the other side of the world to join husbands they have only seen in photographs. Some are as young as 14, still girls, filled with hope and expectation for building a new life with prosperous young men. What awaits at the end of their long journey is a shocking reality: “… we could not have known that when we first saw our husbands we would have no idea who they were.” The women have married 20-year-old photographs, fallen for beautiful promises written by someone else, bet their lives on complete strangers full of desperate lies.

The lives of these women in a harsh new world proves difficult, even fatal. They join their husbands out in the back-wrenching fields, and many endure nightly assaults. They will clean other people’s houses, raise other people’s children. Those who can will learn other people’s language, learn to eat other people’s food. Most will have children of their own – some will live beyond infancy, some will survive to give their parents great joy, others only heartbreak. The lucky will have their own homes, others will always live at the mercy of others. Finally, when the War comes and they are branded by their government as the enemy, most will go – in disbelief – without protest.

Once they are gone, Otsuka uses the final chapter to brilliantly, astonishingly flip the ‘us vs. them’ paradigm. Suddenly, “we” are the ‘real’ Americans who were not rounded up, who were not imprisoned for no other reason that looking like the enemy: some are “more than a little relieved to see the Japanese go,” although some of our younger children have nightmares having abruptly lost their classmates and friends. But now that they are gone, we finally take the time to read the fine print on the tattered relocation notices, although “what it was, exactly, that these instructions spelled out, none of us can clearly recall.” Oh, the consequences of selective amnesia …

Post-9/11, Buddha is both historical reminder and contemporary warning of the indelible effects of a ’you’re either with us or against us’-polarized world. Read and take heed.

Tidbit: On March 26, 2012, Buddha deservedly won the 2012 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. Yipppeeee indeed!

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2011

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When the Emperor Was Divine by Julie Otsuka + Author Interview

when-the-emperor-was-divineLooking Back at a Family’s Internment: Julie Otsuka’s novel debuts in paperback

OK, I’m going to go out on a limb and say that Julie Otsuka’s When the Emperor Was Divine, just out in paperback this week, is the best book on the internment that I have ever read. Spare and streamlined, Emperor is a shockingly brilliant debut novel. Historically accurate, this slim volume has no surprises or plot twists – but it will make you gasp as it exposes the truth.

The title is an indirect reference to life before World War II, a time when the Japanese still believed that their emperor was descended from the gods. When the very human voice of the defeated emperor announced the Japanese surrender, the illusion of divinity was shattered forever. For the Japanese American family in Emperor, pre-WWII was a time of relative normalcy, of freedom.

Divided into five tense chapters, Otsuka’s novel gives voice to each of the four family members. The California-born and raised Otsuka, whose mother’s family was interned in Topaz, Utah, is a remarkable witness – read her testimony and help ensure that the mistakes of our past are not repeated again.

AsianWeek: I understand you came to writing somewhat circuitously …
Julie Otsuka: I was a painter when I was younger, and I did my undergraduate degree [at Yale] in art. I went to the Midwest to do a graduate program in painting, but dropped out after three months. I think I was too young – I found the experience of having to produce art under pressure fairly traumatic, and left there thinking I’d never paint again. I moved to New York City and began temping. After a few months, I wanted to paint again, so I enrolled at an art school downtown – a non-degree program. After another two years, I hit a wall – I was overwhelmed with doubt, couldn’t put down even one mark on the canvas without being sure it was ‘wrong’ – and this time I gave up painting for good.

AW: So then what happened?
Otsuka: I was working evenings in midtown as a word processor, so I had a whole day to fill up. I didn’t know what to do with myself, so I began going for long walks every morning and in the afternoon I’d go to my neighborhood café and just sit there and read for hours. I found stories terribly consoling. After reading in the café for about three years, I began to think that I might want to write, so I signed up for a creative writing class. Because I felt like a failure – a failed painter – I felt I had nothing to lose, and writing was something I did just for fun. I didn’t take it too seriously, which was probably a good thing. After a couple of years, I applied to Columbia and got an MFA in creative writing [in 1999]. Half of my novel appeared in my thesis. Before Columbia, I had only written comic stories; I had never written about the war.

AW: What prompted you to write what would become Emperor?
Otsuka: It started as a visual image of a woman standing on a street, looking at a sign on a telephone pole – that sign being [Executive Order] 9066. The image gripped me, although I don’t know why. In my mind, I followed her home to see what she might do after that. I had no idea that what I was writing might be the beginning of a novel – I would have been terrified to think it was something that big …[click here for more]

Author interview: “Looking Back at a Family’s Internment: Julie Otsuka’s novel debuts in paperback,” AsianWeek, October 24, 2003

Readers: Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2002, 2003 (paperback)

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Filed under ...Author Interview/Profile, ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, Japanese American

When the Emperor Was Divine by Julie Otsuka

when-the-emperor-was-divineOver 60 years ago, the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 – “a day that will live in infamy” as then-President Roosevelt named it – eventually led to the signing of Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1942. Through misguided patriotic paranoia, 9066 caused the incarceration of 120,000 Americans of Japanese descent in concentration camps scattered through the West. These prisoners – U.S. citizens, for the most part – lost their homes, their possessions, their communities and their guaranteed, inalienable rights. All because they physically resembled the enemy.

The family in Julie Otsuka’s shockingly brilliant novel debut novel, When the Emperor Was Divine, represents four of those prisoners – a mother, a father, a daughter and son. Historically accurate, there are no surprises or plot twists in this slim volume – but it will make you gasp as it exposes the truth. It is undoubtedly one of the most effective, memorable books to deal with the internment crisis.

The title is an indirect reference to life before World War II, a time when the Japanese still believed that their emperor was descended from the gods. When the very human voice of the defeated emperor announced the Japanese surrender, the illusion of divinity was shattered forever. For the American family in Otsuka’s title, pre-WWII was a time of relative normalcy, of freedom.

Divided into five tense chapters, Otsuka’s novel gives voice to each of the four members of an unnamed family who survive the incarceration, only to return to a hostile home. Otsuka’s decision not to name her imprisoned family underlines the dehumanization 9066 wreaked upon citizens’ lives.

The novel begins with the mother, who reads the posted evacuation order on “a sunny day in Berkeley [California] in the spring of 1942,” with the new glasses that ironically allow her to see clearly for the first time in weeks. Her husband has already been taken in the middle of the night, in bathrobe and slippers – his crime unnamed, his sentence unknown.

The mother packs away her life and prepares her family for an unknown other existence far away from all that is familiar. She detachedly buys a hammer, refusing the credit the storeowner offers because she does not want to leave with unsettled accounts. She writes a note to herself that no pets are allowed and goes home to deal with the cat, the chicken, the lame dog and finally the talking bird. Her methodical, controlled movements are frightening in their helpless precision – she has no choice but to obey.

Six months later, the family rides a dusty overcrowded train after being kept captive in hurriedly converted, rancid horse stalls. The girl’s voice describes the monotony of the journey, heading toward their desert destination, a camp in a barren stretch of Utah called Topaz.

As their new life begins, the son’s voice emerges to describe a life within barbed wire fences, of freezing nights and parched days, of endless lines waiting for meals, water and open latrines. As the war rages on, the War Relocation Authority swoops in to procure cheap labor to harvest crops, but the world beyond the fence is even more hostile: “They said they’d been shot at. Spat on. …They said the signs in the windows were the same wherever they went: NO JAPS ALLOWED. Life was easier, they said, on this side of the fence.” 

Three years later, the war is over and mother, daughter and son return home, a home they barely recognize in a neighborhood that doesn’t want them, to friends who refuse to remember them. Their newly reinstated, so-called freedom is an ironic slap in the face. Post-war reality is harsh, but clear: “We looked at ourselves in the mirror and did not like what we saw: black hair, yellow skin, slanted eyes. The cruel face of the enemy.” 

But for the first time, the three become “we” as the father is finally reunited with his family – yet reunion is heartbreaking: “Although we had been waiting for this moment, the moment of our father’s return, for more than four years now, when we finally saw him standing there before us on the platform we did not know what to think, what to do. … Because the man who stood there before us was not our father. He was somebody else, a stranger who had been sent back in our father’s place.” 

In the final pages, we’re given a glimpse of the ordeal that turned the father into that stranger. Entitled “Confession,” and written in first person, the “I” admits to ridiculous accusations – “It was me. I did it. I poisoned your reservoirs. I sprinkled your food with insecticide …” and so on with each admission becoming wilder. And in frustration, the “I” continues with “I’m the one you call Jap. I’m the one who call Nip. I’m the one you call Slits. … I’m the one you don’t see at all – we all look alike.” After four grueling years of having everything taken from him, including his individuality, his dignity and his freedom, he only wants to sign on the dotted line and go.

The maturity of Otsuka’s first prose is astonishing. In a sparse 160 pages, she captures the bewilderment, the cruelty, the inexplicable experiences of a group of Americans punished for what they look like. The urgency in her voice is especially poignant, given life post-9-11 when again, the innocent continue to be punished, even killed because of a mistaken resemblance to the so-called enemy. Otsuka is a remarkable witness – read her testimony and help ensure that the mistakes of our past are not repeated again.

Review: The Bloomsbury Review, September/October 2002

Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult, Adult

Published: 2002

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Filed under ...Absolute Favorites, ..Adult Readers, ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, Japanese American