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Paperback Brazil-Maru Book

ISBN: 1566890160

ISBN13: 9781566890168

Brazil-Maru

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

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Book Overview

From Japanese-American writer Yamashita: a story of Japanese emigration set, like her first novel ( Through the Arc of the Rain Forest , 1990), in Brazil. A range of characters, male and female, tell about a particular group of Japanese who emigrated to Brazil in the first decades of this century. Christian, well-educated, and reasonably affluent, they sought to establish communities where Christian and Japanese values could flourish. The group prospered, though not without cost, and it is this cost that's a major theme here. A secondary theme, suggested by the quotes from the philosopher Rousseau that precede each section, is the nature of education in a new world where emigrants' children often have only 'natural and purely physical knowledge.' Young Emile begins with his recollections of his 1925 arrival in Brazil as a small child; the uncomfortable journey to the settlement where families already there helped them clear land; and the hard work required to become self-sufficient. But even the most idealistic communities have problems, and, successively, Emile, Haru, Kantaro, and Genji, over the years, record the events and personalities that threatened the group: Kantaro, the visionary and dilettante, whose enterprises from baseball to chicken-farming had unforeseen consequences; the bitter divisions caused by WW I that led to the murder of an original founder; the effects of the enduring passion of Yergo for Haru; and the increased assimilation with neighboring Brazilians. Paradoxically, assimilated Guillerme notes in an epilogue that thousands of unemployed Japanese-Brazilians are currently working in Japan as menial labor. Though often seeming more a work of reportage than a novel, Yamashita's characters are vital, full-bodied creations offering sufficient balance, as well as answers to the questions raised. Informative and timely.- Kirkus

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

wonderful heartbreaking story

This is one of the most wonderful stories I have read in a very long time. It deals with around 70 years of history of a japanese farming community in Brazil, beginning with the birth of the community, its demise and finally the integration of the younger generation as well as their attempts to connect to a homeland that doesn't really exist. The story is told through several characters: Ichiro, who comes to Brazil as a young boy and witnesses the birth of the colony, only to find out that his dream has been shred to pieces by the same man that made him believe in it in the first place, Haru, who we see grow from the beauty of the colony to an old resourceful grandma that endures all of her husband's infidelities, Kantaro, who at the beginning appears to be a dreamer but at the end turns out to destroy everyone's lives (with a mother and a daughter, Kimi and Akiko being the victims with the most heartbreaking stories), Genji, Kantaro's nephew who grows up in the commune but fails to adapt to life in Post-War Brazil and finally Guilherme, a second generation japanese who is and feels brazilian. Read it now!

Good historical fiction

"Brazil-Maru" is the story of a Japanese colony in the countryside of Sao Paulo State throughout the twentieth century. Although the locations and ideas are real, the story itself is not. "Brazil-Maru" is an interesting book with living characters and is a good "fictional" account of the lives of Japanese immigrants to Brazil in this past century.
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