Winner of the American Book AwardBased on the author's own experiences, this award-winning novel was the first to tell the story of the evacuation, relocation, and dispersal of Canadian citizens of Japanese ancestry during the Second World War.
Obasan Serie
Esta conmovedora saga profundiza en los dolorosos temas del desplazamiento y la resiliencia. Sigue la historia de una familia obligada a enfrentar la injusticia y la pérdida durante un período histórico turbulento. La narradora comparte recuerdos de infancia marcados por la pérdida del hogar y la identidad, y la fuerza silenciosa que los sostiene ante la adversidad. La serie explora el profundo impacto del silencio y el trauma no expresado a través de las generaciones.


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On the 60th anniversary of the bombing that claimed Naomi's young mother in Obasan, Joy Kogawa revisits her second novel—Itsuka—now retitled Emily Kato In Obasan, Naomi's childhood was torn apart by Canada's betrayal of Japanese Canadian citizens during the 1940s. Years later, living quietly as a schoolteacher in the prairies, Naomi suffers the passing of the dear aunt and uncle who raised her, and her wounds are reopened. But Naomi's other aunt—the feisty Emily Kato—convinces her to move to Toronto and encourages her to become involved in the Japanese Canadian fight for redress. Politically charged and intimately poetic, Emily Kato tells the story of one community's struggle for justice, extraordinary commitment, and profound hope.