So Far from the Sea by Eve Bunting
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Ignore the cover. I hate the cover. The illustrations inside are terrific, though. Soentpiet (pronounced soon-pete) is a genius. The story, by Eve Bunting, follows a Japanese-American family whose parents are revisiting the location of the internment camp where the father had once been ... well, interned. The grandfather is buried there as well. This will be the last time they are able to visit before moving east.
Soentpiet separates the main timeline from the WWII timeline by making the illustrations of the latter in black and white like photos (or, as Calvin's dad explained to him, in the old days, the world was monochromatic).
The father revisits his past and the psychological blow of being interned that he says started killing the grandfather before he even developed pneumonia. But, he tells us, it's "a thing that cannot be changed." What it was, was what it was. Gotta move on.
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