The Kadena Story

Okinawa in the Aftermath of April Fool's Day of 1945ay

Fiction & Literature, Historical
Cover of the book The Kadena Story by Kazumi Heshiki, BookBaby
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Kazumi Heshiki ISBN: 9781617927843
Publisher: BookBaby Publication: January 1, 2001
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Kazumi Heshiki
ISBN: 9781617927843
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication: January 1, 2001
Imprint:
Language: English
Okinawa was one of the last battlegrounds of the Second World War. The three–month long warfare, which started on April 1, 1945 – a beautiful Easter Sunday according to American war correspondent Ernie Pyle – ended with hundreds of thousands of deaths on both sides – including that of Pyle himself. When the winners and the losers left the scene to reappear in later acts, telling endless stories of their own, Okinawans – the residents of the islands – who lost more lives than either of the American or Japanese troops, were left behind on the dark stage to be little noticed by the world audience. When the lights soon came back on Okinawa, it was dubbed "the Keystone of the Pacific,” a term first used of the islands by Commodore Perry about a hundred years earlier. The main attraction for the United States was the projection of military power with the presence of all four branches of the US forces on the island. The island residents performed the necessary understudy roles with few lines to say their say. This characterization of the islands persists even today, some forty years after America returned Okinawa to Japan. The peace-aspiring and art-loving people are seldom spoken of or heard from on the international scene despite their invaluable contribution. “Kadena Story” brings Okinawans to the center stage detailing the lives of the people through the storm of war and in its aftermath. The title consists of two separate stories – one under the same title as on the book cover and the other with the title “The Son.” The first story depicts a woman who had been disowned by her parents because of her marriage to an American marine. The severance caused her financial, social and personal trauma. But what haunted her most was her memory of the mysterious expression she discovered on her mothers face that day as they talked about her wish to marry. Her mother de facto endorsed her father’s action by not uttering a single word for or against the marriage: her face was void of any sign of emotion except for a hint of vulnerableness. The inscrutability of her mother’s mind had agonized her ever since; she had been suspecting that her marriage was not the true reason for her mother’s continued refusal to see her again. Wondering in a dusk-clad riverside park in her old village of Kadena on the day of mother’s funeral, she came across the woman from her childhood who she once believed to have put on her a curse to affect her entire life. “The Son” is a story of a man who came back to Okinawa from America to replenish meaning to his old memories after thirty years of absence. He had fled his home and his native land feeling he had had enough of both: on one hand, his father had been said to be having an affair, and on the other, Okinawa’s chronic dispute over autonomy seemed to be dragging on forever with no practical solution. Travelling through the towns and villages that now made him feel like a stranger to them with a young woman as his tour guide he started regaining his youth, and, at the same time, his feelings toward her grew irresistible. As a critical moment in his emotion was closing in on him, he ran into a minor accident with his car, leading him to an unexpected thing that click-opened his memory of his father and the name of a mysterious woman – the epicenter of his family’s disintegration some thirty years earlier. Stories of three generations of Okinawans intertwine with one another among themselves and with the happenings in the turbulent relations between US, Japan and Okinawa. This presents the reader a portrait of robust Okinawan society and families.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Okinawa was one of the last battlegrounds of the Second World War. The three–month long warfare, which started on April 1, 1945 – a beautiful Easter Sunday according to American war correspondent Ernie Pyle – ended with hundreds of thousands of deaths on both sides – including that of Pyle himself. When the winners and the losers left the scene to reappear in later acts, telling endless stories of their own, Okinawans – the residents of the islands – who lost more lives than either of the American or Japanese troops, were left behind on the dark stage to be little noticed by the world audience. When the lights soon came back on Okinawa, it was dubbed "the Keystone of the Pacific,” a term first used of the islands by Commodore Perry about a hundred years earlier. The main attraction for the United States was the projection of military power with the presence of all four branches of the US forces on the island. The island residents performed the necessary understudy roles with few lines to say their say. This characterization of the islands persists even today, some forty years after America returned Okinawa to Japan. The peace-aspiring and art-loving people are seldom spoken of or heard from on the international scene despite their invaluable contribution. “Kadena Story” brings Okinawans to the center stage detailing the lives of the people through the storm of war and in its aftermath. The title consists of two separate stories – one under the same title as on the book cover and the other with the title “The Son.” The first story depicts a woman who had been disowned by her parents because of her marriage to an American marine. The severance caused her financial, social and personal trauma. But what haunted her most was her memory of the mysterious expression she discovered on her mothers face that day as they talked about her wish to marry. Her mother de facto endorsed her father’s action by not uttering a single word for or against the marriage: her face was void of any sign of emotion except for a hint of vulnerableness. The inscrutability of her mother’s mind had agonized her ever since; she had been suspecting that her marriage was not the true reason for her mother’s continued refusal to see her again. Wondering in a dusk-clad riverside park in her old village of Kadena on the day of mother’s funeral, she came across the woman from her childhood who she once believed to have put on her a curse to affect her entire life. “The Son” is a story of a man who came back to Okinawa from America to replenish meaning to his old memories after thirty years of absence. He had fled his home and his native land feeling he had had enough of both: on one hand, his father had been said to be having an affair, and on the other, Okinawa’s chronic dispute over autonomy seemed to be dragging on forever with no practical solution. Travelling through the towns and villages that now made him feel like a stranger to them with a young woman as his tour guide he started regaining his youth, and, at the same time, his feelings toward her grew irresistible. As a critical moment in his emotion was closing in on him, he ran into a minor accident with his car, leading him to an unexpected thing that click-opened his memory of his father and the name of a mysterious woman – the epicenter of his family’s disintegration some thirty years earlier. Stories of three generations of Okinawans intertwine with one another among themselves and with the happenings in the turbulent relations between US, Japan and Okinawa. This presents the reader a portrait of robust Okinawan society and families.

More books from BookBaby

Cover of the book The Last King of Shambhala by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book The Book of ReHab by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book Green Didn't Like to Fly by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book How Did They Get So Rich? by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book Cryptic by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book The Wild Love of God by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book An Entrepreneur's Words to Live By by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book Sex and the Jazz Musician - The Hollywood Years and Beyond by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book The New Fundraising Reality for Entrepreneurs by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book Fastian by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book True Life Stories About 'The Voice', VERN GOSDIN by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book The Least of My Brothers by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book Awesome Aunt Dolly in Action by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book In 60 Metres turn right by Kazumi Heshiki
Cover of the book ¿Por qué no tengo pareja? y ¿por qué tengo la pareja que tengo? by Kazumi Heshiki
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy