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Hardcover Music for Alice Book

ISBN: 0618311181

ISBN13: 9780618311187

Music for Alice

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

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Book Overview

A Japanese American farmer recounts her agricultural successes and setbacks and her enduring love of dance. Based on the true life story of Alice Sumida, who with her husband Mark, established the largest gladiola bulb farm in the country during the lasthalf of the twentieth century.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

"A SPLENDID TRIUMPH OF FORTITUDE"

Lucky is the parent?/grandparent? who chooses this book to share with a child. The reader may be swamped with memories (possibly guilty?) of the 1940's when fear and hatred gripped many Americans. After the Pearl Harbor attack, fellow citizens of Nisei background were herded into camps behind barbed wire. One couple, Mark & Alice Sumida, became farmers instead, a lucky & rare alternative. Alice kept the music of dance in her soul, even when WORK was her whole existence. Students in grades 4-7 may not often select "picture books" for their reading, nor books about the serious topics covered here by perceptive Allen Say. His is a morality tale . . . of resilience, and of creative thinking. Through his words and exquisite drawings a salute to courage and fortitude is etched upon one's mind. How can Alice respond to hardships with humor dancing in her eyes? Yet she does. The evidence is shown in three drawings of the mature woman. REVIEWER mcHAIKU SUGGESTS: "Don't miss any opportunity to talk with youth about how Justice often takes flight in wartime."

A subtle and delicate family story

With Alice, Say puts a face on the experience of the Japanese American's who were relocated during WWII. Alice and her husband, Mark Sumida's, first "relocation" was to a cow stall at the stockyards. From there they "volunteered" to be farmhands. They were sent to the deserts of eastern Oregon were they were encouraged to grow crops as part of the war effort. Mark studied agronomy and tried to improve the soil by growing alfalfa in the off-season. Through hard work, they became the largest gladiola bulb growers in the US after the war. This is a subtle and delicate family story the reminds all Americans of the injustices that Japanese Americans faced during WWII. Karen Woodworth Roman, East Asian Children's Books.
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