The Moved-Outers: Difference between revisions
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The theme of the novel is the [[Japanese-American internment|treatment of Japanese Americans]] on the West Coast during [[World War II]]. The story centers on Sumiko (Sue) Ohara, a high school senior from [[Rancho Cordova, California|Cordova, California]]. It describes the internment of herself, her brother Kim, and her mother in [[Granada War Relocation Center|Amache, Colorado]], while her father is sent to [[North Dakota]]. During her stay there, she falls in love with a neighbor from Cordova, Jiro Ito. The novel ends in 1943, with the war still in progress, as Jiro and Kim join the army, and Sue and Jiro's sister go to college.<ref>''The Newbery Companion'' by John Thomas Gillespie and Corinne J. Naden, Libraries Unlimited, 2001, p. 140-1</ref> The book stresses the patriotism of the ordinary Japanese American. |
The theme of the novel is the [[Japanese-American internment|treatment of Japanese Americans]] on the West Coast during [[World War II]]. The story centers on Sumiko (Sue) Ohara, a high school senior from [[Rancho Cordova, California|Cordova, California]]. It describes the internment of herself, her brother Kim, and her mother in [[Granada War Relocation Center|Amache, Colorado]], while her father is sent to [[North Dakota]]. During her stay there, she falls in love with a neighbor from Cordova, Jiro Ito. The novel ends in 1943, with the war still in progress, as Jiro and Kim join the army, and Sue and Jiro's sister go to college.<ref>''The Newbery Companion'' by John Thomas Gillespie and Corinne J. Naden, Libraries Unlimited, 2001, p. 140-1</ref> The book stresses the patriotism of the ordinary Japanese American. |
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<blockquote>"We're really the newest pioneers," Sue said in a hushed voice. "We, the evacuees, the moved-outers. We're American patriots, loving our country with our hearts broken. And those who must can be pioneers behind barbed wire, but those who can must go out and pioneer in the wide world." |
<blockquote>"We're really the newest pioneers," Sue said in a hushed voice. "We, the evacuees, the moved-outers. We're American patriots, loving our country with our hearts broken. And those who must can be pioneers behind barbed wire, but those who can must go out and pioneer in the wide world."<ref>''The Moved-Outers'', Walker, 1993 edition, p.149</ref></blockquote> |
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==Bibliography== |
==Bibliography== |
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[[Category:Houghton Mifflin books]] |
[[Category:Houghton Mifflin books]] |
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[[Category:1945 children's books]] |
[[Category:1945 children's books]] |
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[[Category:Rancho Cordova, California]] |
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{{1940s-child-novel-stub}} |
{{1940s-child-novel-stub}} |
Revision as of 04:17, 1 September 2018
The Moved-Outers is a children's novel by Florence Crannell Means. Illustrated by Helen Blair, it was first published in 1945 and was a Newbery Honor recipient in 1946.[1]
The theme of the novel is the treatment of Japanese Americans on the West Coast during World War II. The story centers on Sumiko (Sue) Ohara, a high school senior from Cordova, California. It describes the internment of herself, her brother Kim, and her mother in Amache, Colorado, while her father is sent to North Dakota. During her stay there, she falls in love with a neighbor from Cordova, Jiro Ito. The novel ends in 1943, with the war still in progress, as Jiro and Kim join the army, and Sue and Jiro's sister go to college.[2] The book stresses the patriotism of the ordinary Japanese American.
"We're really the newest pioneers," Sue said in a hushed voice. "We, the evacuees, the moved-outers. We're American patriots, loving our country with our hearts broken. And those who must can be pioneers behind barbed wire, but those who can must go out and pioneer in the wide world."[3]
Bibliography
- The Moved-Outers. Houghton Mifflin. 1945.; reprint Walker, 1993, ISBN 978-0-8027-7386-9
References
- ^ "Newbery Medal and Honor Books, 1922-Present". American Library Association. Retrieved 2009-12-30.
- ^ The Newbery Companion by John Thomas Gillespie and Corinne J. Naden, Libraries Unlimited, 2001, p. 140-1
- ^ The Moved-Outers, Walker, 1993 edition, p.149
External links
Brian Niiya, The Moved-Outers Densho Encyclopedia