cover image My Lost Freedom: A Japanese American World War II Story

My Lost Freedom: A Japanese American World War II Story

George Takei, illus. by Michelle Lee. Crown, $19.99 (48p) ISBN 978-0-5935-6635-0

Embracing a child’s wide-eyed perspective of historical events, activist and actor Takei details his family’s incarceration in Japanese prison camps during WWII. Takei is four years old during the 1941 Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, after which “the lives of all Japanese Americans were suddenly and drastically changed.” Following President Roosevelt’s declaration of war on Japan, a February 1942 presidential order forces the Takeis, along with all other Japanese Americans on the West Coast, from their Los Angeles home. Pages detail the family’s time at Arkansas’s swampy Camp Rohwer (“a strange and magical place” where the author caught tadpoles in a drainage ditch) and Northern California’s Tule Lake, a maximum-security prison with “huge, rumbling tank patrols.” Lee’s crisp mixed-media illustrations echo the text’s childlike tone (when the family is held at a racetrack, Takei “thought it would be fun to sleep where the horsies slept”) in portraying individual, familial, and communal experiences throughout a “hard, terrible war.” A glossary and pronunciation guide, notes, and photos conclude. Ages 6–9. (Apr.)