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ISBN 921870-43-4
6 x 9
208 pp, $14.95

Fiction

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Daruma Days
By Terry Watada

Set in the internment camps of the British Columbia interior during World War II, Terry Watada's Daruma Days captures the Japanese Canadian experience of imprisonment. Watada draws on the accounts of people who lived through the camps, often speaking with the voices of the issei and nisei, to portray the camps as haunted by demonic forces, the inhabitants caught between two worlds: the cultures of Japan and Canada. With his use of Japanese folklore, ghost stories and legends, Watada presents a collection of astonishing experiences: a mirror that reveals a murdered picture bride turned prostitute, fireballs that strike the wicked, the chaos of the uprooting itself, as thousands of people were forcibly moved to the wilderness. Watada has himself conducted many interviews with camp internees (including his parents), and he now discloses the heretofore unmentioned gangsterism and scandals among the Japanese Canadians themselves — an eye-opener for most readers who have never been permitted this unusual viewpoint. With its controversial materials, Daruma Days alters our understanding of the internment camps forever.
 


Well-known for his column in the Nikkei Voice, Terry Watada is the author of three plays, a history of Buddhism and A Thousand Homes, a collection of poetry. He is also a musician who has composed and produced nine albums. He lives and teaches in Toronto.