Bilingual English/Japanese.
Amy Lee-Tai\'s gentle prose and Felicia Hoshino\'s stunning mixed media images are a testimony to hope and how it can survive alongside even the harshest injustice..
The art schools which offered internees moments of solace and self-expression are a little known part of this history.
Inspired by her family\'s experiences, author Amy Lee-tai has crafted a story rooted in one of America\'s most shameful historical episodes--the internment of 120,000 Japanese Americans during World War II.
Somehow, glimmers of hope begin to surface under the harsh sun--in the eyes of a kindly art teacher, in the tender words of Mari\'s parents, and in the smile of a new friend.
But it\'s hard to think of anything to draw in a Place Where nothing beautiful grows.
The summer sun is blazingly hot, and Mari\'s art class has begun.
Mari wonders if anything can bloom at Topaz, Where her family is interned along with thousands of other Japanese Americans during World War II.
A young girl finds things to be joyful about in the Topaz Internment Camp.
Bilingual English/Japanese