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American Jap Girl: A Samurai Daughter’s Ikigai—From Incarceration to Legacy
Indigo
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American Jap Girl: A Samurai Daughter’s Ikigai—From Incarceration to Legacy
By None
Current price: $9.99


By None
American Jap Girl: A Samurai Daughter’s Ikigai—From Incarceration to Legacy
Current price: $9.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
Incarceration to Inspiration: Ikigai Legacy of an American Jap Girl
In 1925, three-year-old Tome, one of nine children, is abandoned by her birth parents. Raised by a foster family who instill in her the Bushido code of honor and perseverance, she grows up believing she's an all-American girl—until America brands her a "Jap."
When Executive Order 9066 uproots her family and confines them behind barbed wire, Tome endures injustice with quiet strength, guided by her purpose: her ikigai. Through war, poverty, and personal tragedy, including a desperate moment of near suicide—halted by her young son Richard's cry, "No, Mommy, no!"—she transforms pain into determination.
American Jap Girl, told in Tome's posthumous voice and reconstructed from family journals, reclaims a racial slur as a symbol of resilience and belonging. Spanning from the Great Depression to the rise of postwar California, Tome's story is a testament to one woman's defiance against the myth of inferiority and her transformation of suffering into legacy.
Incarceration to Inspiration: Ikigai Legacy of an American Jap Girl
In 1925, three-year-old Tome, one of nine children, is abandoned by her birth parents. Raised by a foster family who instill in her the Bushido code of honor and perseverance, she grows up believing she's an all-American girl—until America brands her a "Jap."
When Executive Order 9066 uproots her family and confines them behind barbed wire, Tome endures injustice with quiet strength, guided by her purpose: her ikigai. Through war, poverty, and personal tragedy, including a desperate moment of near suicide—halted by her young son Richard's cry, "No, Mommy, no!"—she transforms pain into determination.
American Jap Girl, told in Tome's posthumous voice and reconstructed from family journals, reclaims a racial slur as a symbol of resilience and belonging. Spanning from the Great Depression to the rise of postwar California, Tome's story is a testament to one woman's defiance against the myth of inferiority and her transformation of suffering into legacy.


















