by Chloe Ito Ward (Author) Violet Kim (Illustrator)
After a racist encounter, an Asian American girl decides to fight hate by spreading love.
Aiko learns that Japanese Americans were once put in prison camps in her own country--the US--and that there are still some people who don't like her, for no reason. But Aiko also learns that people respond to acts of kindness.
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A Japanese American girl responds to prejudice in this sensitive debut drawn from Ward's childhood. Akio is with her grandmother at the market, shopping for "mouthwatering makizushi, salty but sweet;/ fresh fuji apples, crisp and clean," when she stumbles into a man who mutters, "Go back to your own country." Confused, Akio asks Oba¯, "I was born here. Where would I go back to?" As the two drink a cup of tea at the ramen shop, Oba¯'s friend tells Akio about when "my old home, Japan, began to fight with my new home, America." And upon encountering an implied incidence of anti-Asian hate, Akio works to respond through acts of kindness. Present events are rendered in primary colors, while the past appears in a sepia palette. Background characters are portrayed with various skin tones. A Japanese glossary and author's note conclude. Ages 4-8. (Apr.)
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