cover image Stubborn Twig: Three Generations in the Life of a Japanese-American Family

Stubborn Twig: Three Generations in the Life of a Japanese-American Family

Lauren Kessler. Random House (NY), $25 (347pp) ISBN 978-0-679-41426-1

The Japanese immigrant experience is documented here in a detailed social history of three generations of an Oregon family. Beginning with the life of 16-year-old Masuo Yasui, who arrived in 1903 from an agricultural village in the Honshu region of Japan to work as a railroad laborer in Oregon's Hood River Valley, the book reaches to the lives of his grandchildren--lawyers, doctors, teachers and filmmakers--some of whom have married non-Asians. Kessler, a journalism teacher at the University of Oregon and author of six books, takes us through the obstacle course which Asian immigrants typically had to overcome, from the early exclusionary laws barring them from citizenship, to WW II internment camps. Her research into each of her subject's lives is diligent and she recounts the intimate tragedies (suicides, illnesses), the determination, hard work and family solidarity that characterized the Yasuis' rise to affluence and success. Kessler has created a praiseworthy chronicle of the ``process and meaning of becoming an American, of promise and prejudice in a new land.'' As she writes in her preface, ``Being an outsider is the quintessential American experience. It is, in fact, our single common bond.'' (Nov.)