The Emperor of Any Place
The Emperor of Any Place
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Candlewick Press
Annotation: When Evan's father dies suddenly, Evan finds the hand-bound yellow book his dad was reading when he passed away and discovers it is the diary of a Japanese soldier stranded on a small Pacific island during World War II, and Evan must find out why his grandfather would go to such lengths to keep it hidden.
 
Reviews: 7
Catalog Number: #138300
Format: Perma-Bound Edition
Special Formats: Inventory Sale Inventory Sale
Publisher: Candlewick Press
Copyright Date: 2017
Edition Date: 2017 Release Date: 03/14/17
Pages: 324 pages
ISBN: Publisher: 0-7636-9442-8 Perma-Bound: 0-605-97114-5
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-0-7636-9442-5 Perma-Bound: 978-0-605-97114-1
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2014953457
Dimensions: 23 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
School Library Journal Starred Review

Gr 9 Up-An ambitious treatise on grief, war, memory, and the bonds between fathers and sons. Evan is 16 when his beloved father dies suddenly at home. Evan has no other family, so his estranged grandfather, Griff, whom he has never met, flies in to help him settle the affairs. The source of the family schism was the Vietnam War, when Evan's hippie father moved to Canada to dodge the draft, infuriating his father, a lifelong Marine. While going through his father's belongings, Evan happens upon a Japanese diary detailing a marooned soldier's account during World War II, a book that he knows he must keep from his grandfather at all costs. The narrative contained in this secret book unfolds throughout the course of the novel as readers meet Lance Corporal Isamu Oshiro of the Imperial Japanese Army through his own words and learn how his story ended up in the hands of Evan's father. This work is at its best when it is mired in deathseen in Oshiro's self-appointed job as island undertaker, as well as in Griff's stoic refusal to discuss his son's deathand Wynne-Jones is spot-on in his writing on grief, especially from Evan's point of view. The book-within-a-book plot is less successful, as Oshiro's account is a bit lengthy, and the suspense of Griff's involvement ends quickly and conveniently, without much satisfaction for readers. However, the high points of this tale make it worth a first purchase. VERDICT Offering a unique take on the World War II period, this intergenerational tale is an excellent addition to most YA collections. Susannah Goldstein, Convent of the Sacred Heart, New York City

Horn Book

A strange book was sent to Evan's father just before his sudden death. As Evan reads the book--the translated journal of a WWII Japanese soldier stranded on a mystical island with an American Marine--he experiences a sense of dij`-vu. Wynne-Jones skillfully weaves the World War II journal into Evan's story, building suspense and creating a cracking mystery. An affecting, unforgettable read.

Starred Review ALA Booklist

Starred Review Two weeks after finding his father dead with his head resting on a sand-colored book, Evan is still numbed by his loss when three things happen: He receives a puzzling phone call about the book. He begins the strange journey of reading it. And Griff, the grandfather he has never met, arrives unexpectedly early to help settle his father's affairs and take measure of his estranged son's son. Reading the mysterious book in secret, Evan finds the interwoven first-person accounts of two soldiers, one Japanese, the other American, stranded on a small Pacific island during WWII and encountering "monsters, ghostly children, eaters of the dead," as well as experiencing pain, privation, and loss. In this well-structured and beautifully written novel, the historical narrative alternates with chapters of Evan's present-day story, in which he unravels the mystery of Griff's involvement as a young marine with events on the island, and, simultaneously, takes his own measure of his grandfather. Wynne-Jones writes with a sure hand and a willingness to take readers into uncharted territory. The main characters in both time periods are complex and vividly portrayed, while the stories, both supernatural and realistic, quietly take note of nuances that standard narratives overlook. A riveting, remarkable novel by a reliably great Canadian writer.

Word Count: 89,153
Reading Level: 5.2
Interest Level: 9-12
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 5.2 / points: 14.0 / quiz: 177046 / grade: Upper Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:6.2 / points:17.0 / quiz:Q67237
Lexile: HL790L
Evan stands at the door to his father's study. Thereis a sign at eye level: THE DOCKYARD. It was a present he gave to his father ast Christmas,made of cork so that if the house sank, at least the sign would still float. Their little joke.

He raises his hand to knock-- a habit he can begin to unlearn. So much of grief is unlearning. He opens the door, steps inside, and takes a shallow breath, afraid of what might belingering on the air. But there are only the old familiar smells:Royal Lime aftershave, glue, sawdust.

This is where he found him.

He thought his father had fallen asleep. The only sign thatanything was wrong was the new model ship lying on its side on the carpet. His father had finished it the evening before--fourteen days ago. Evan had picked up the ship; it wasn't damaged. He found a space for it on the shelf with the other ships,a couple dozen of them. He placed it there to join his father's bottled armada. "Not so grand as an armada," his father had once said. "More like a flotilla."

Clifford E. Griffin III, a modest man.

It was strange doing that, picking up the boat and placing itcarefully on the shelf, pretending his father was asleep behindhim. Only asleep. There was no blood, no sign of a struggle, just the boat in its bottleon its side on the floor. And his father pitched over his desk, his face strained, his eyelids and jaw tense,rigor mortis setting in. He even died modestly.

Hypertrophiccardiomyopathy. The muscle of his heart had been thickening. Evan had watched his father rub his chest afair bit, the look on his face more annoyance than pain. And he would get short of breath when he was gardening. That was about it.

And then that was it.

Fourteen days ago. No -- fifteen. Now Evan moves into the room, heads over to the desk,the chair pushed back so hard against the wall by the paramedics that it left a dent in the plaster just under the window. The chair is still there up against the wall. The plants on the sill are dead. One more thing Evan has forgotten to do. There are dried leaves on the floor.

The ambulance arrived thirteen minutes after he called 911.The fire truck got there three minutes faster. Evan stood shivering at the open front door in his boxers and T-shirt, watching the cartoon-red ladder truck pull into the driveway, wondering whether he'd somehow called the wrong number. Huge men, dressed for putting out fires, piled out of the vehicle, sniffed the air, looked up into the early morning haze for smoke or flames-- the kind of stuff they were good at. Then two of them set off at a run around the perimeter of the house-- one this way, one that-- while three of them entered, so large, they seemed to fill up the place and suck out all the air. Evan thought maybe he was suffocating.

One of them checked out the Dockyard. Another one found a blanket somewhere and wrapped Evan up in it, made him sit in the living room, trembling even though it was July. The third fireman brought him water in a glass from the kitchen.

"Is there someone we should call?"

Evan shook his head. His dad was retired now, so he wasn' tgoing to be late for work. Oh! The fireman meant family:another parent or auntie,an older sibling-- that kind of someone. But there really wasn't anyone. Not one he could think of right then, that is-- right at that precise moment. Just him and Dad.

Excerpted from The Emperor of Any Place by Tim Wynne-Jones
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

“Wynne-Jones achieves an extraordinary feat: he illuminates the hidden depths of personalities and families through a mesmerizing blend of realism and magic.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

Evan, overwhelmed and bereaved by his father’s sudden death, doesn’t know what to make of the hand-bound yellow book his dad had been reading when he passed away. Why was his father reading the diary of a Japanese soldier stranded on a small Pacific island during WWII? What is in this account that Evan’s estranged grandfather fears — and will he really do anything, even hurt his own grandson, to prevent it from being seen? In this riveting, time-shifting story within a story, the ghosts of war reverberate across hemispheres and generations.


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