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Summary
Summary
German-American Louise Kessler, 14, starts a scrapbook when her best friend, Dottie Masuoka, leaves for the Japanese internment camps. Louise's scrapbook includes items from her life "on the home front" as well as Dottie's letters and drawings from the internment camp. Together, their intertwined stories tell of a friendship that even war cannot tear apart.
Reviews (5)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 5-9-In this appealing and accessible fictional scrapbook, 14-year-old Louise relates the experience of being separated from her best friend, Dottie, whose Japanese-American family has been relocated to an internment camp following the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Through Louise's journal entries, Dottie's letters, and a variety of authentic-looking newspaper clippings, ticket stubs, and other artifacts, the girls' story emerges powerfully and believably. Readers sense Dottie's distress at her imposed exile, and her anger at being thought un-American. They observe Louise grappling with the injustice of it all, as she is ridiculed for her friendship with Dottie and her own family is targeted because of their German heritage. If the drama of the girls' separation isn't enough, a romantic subplot and the antics of Dottie's goofy dog (living with Louise in her absence) will surely keep young readers interested. This heartwarming tale of steadfast friendship makes a wonderful access point for learning more about World War II and Japanese internment.-Emma Burkhart, Springside School, Philadelphia, PA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
This mock scrapbook envisions a WWII correspondence between two 14-year-olds: Dottie, a Japanese-American sent with her family to an internment camp, and her friend, Louise, who vows to document everything that happens in her absence. Louise fills the scrapbook with newspaper clippings, photographs, and diary entries, in addition to the girls' letters. In one, Dottie describes life in the camp: "Our `homes' are all attached in long lines, so we're like horses in stalls (except horses don't have to share their stalls)". Louise visits Dottie, but then she's relocated and, though they swear to remain friends, Dottie's future is left open-ended. The girls' moving stories should inspire readers to learn more about the history of internment. Ages 10-up. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Horn Book Review
At fourteen, Dottie and Louise pledge "U R 2 Good + 2 B = 4 Gotten" after Pearl Harbor is bombed and Dottie's family is relocated to a Japanese American internment camp. A scrapbook-style collection of the girls' letters, newspaper clippings, photos, and drawings gives readers insight into the pair's friendship, Japanese customs, wartime life, and popular 1940s culture. Bib. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
On April 24, 1942, when Dottie Masouka's Japanese-American family lose their rights as American citizens and are removed to an internment camp in Puyallup, Wash., her best friend Louise Krueger starts working on a scrapbook to share with Dottie. Interspersed with her journal account are Dottie's letters to Louise as well as correspondence from Louise's soldier brother and sailor pen pal, newspaper clippings, drawings and pasted-in realia. Each page is antiqued and yellowed, making the whole nine-month record jibe with Patt's use of '40s slang. The youthful voices ring realistically with 14-year-old righteous indignation. Dottie's sketches and optimism reveal her determination to be strong and help her family get by while living in dust-coated stalls and being watched by gun-toting soldiers. Louise is fearful that families with German names like hers will be taken away as well. Their account of wartime terror is made more poignant by their resolution to make their lives beautiful and meaningful. The faux-diary format is sure to appeal. (Fiction. 9-12)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Louise Krueger, 14, is devastated when her beloved best friend, Dottie Masuoka, is suddenly relocated with her Japanese American family to an internment camp in Washington State in 1942. Louise keeps a scrapbook with the girls' letters, her own journal entries, small photos, newspaper cuttings, wartime posters, and more. Though the format does look authentic, the handwritten material in different italic scripts can be difficult to read. Still, setting the intense personal story of friends and enemies against the big World War II events is a great way to tell the history. Dottie writes about living in cramped horse stalls with her family, including her grandfather, who is heartbroken that she is behind barbed wire. At school, Louise is attacked as a Jap-lover even as her brother enlists in the navy. Patriotism is an underlying theme, and readers will be drawn into the continuing debate about what makes a real American. Back matter features notes about true and fictionalized history, along with references and Web sites for suggested research.--Rochman, Hazel Copyright 2010 Booklist