From the Publisher
Praise for Beneath the Wide Silk Sky:
* "Huey imbues Sam’s narration with familiarity, creating an urgent immediacy that guides this insightful story, whose personal beginnings the author outlines in the creator’s acknowledgments." Publishers Weekly, starred review
Kirkus Reviews
2022-08-17
At the height of World War II, a Japanese American girl and her family navigate life on their farm in Washington state.
High schooler Samantha Sakomoto is tending to Clark Gable, the family rooster, when her best friend, Beau, a White boy, enters the barn with a photo contest entry form. The $50 grand prize would do wonders for Sam and her family, who are struggling to keep their farm on fictional Linley Island. Her older brother, Charlie, deferred his college admission after their mother died last year and helps out by earning money at the local brickyard, while older sister Kiki takes on sewing jobs. Sam’s dad put the last of Charlie’s college fund toward the mortgage to avoid losing the farm, a source of tension between father and son. Winning the contest would be Sam’s contribution. When Japan bombs Pearl Harbor, the racism faced by Sam, her family, and others of Japanese descent on the island intensifies—from spitballs in class to implied sexual assault. Though Sam harbors feelings for 16-year-old Beau, she becomes increasingly close to her neighbor Hiro Tanaka while fighting against the injustice and violence faced by the Japanese American community leading up to their incarceration by the U.S. government. This slice-of-life historical fiction debut meanders, ultimately lacking the emotional impact to do full justice to the horrors it addresses.
A quiet snapshot of a teenager discovering the art of protest. (author’s note) (Historical fiction. 12-16)