Copyright Date:
2023
Edition Date:
2023
Release Date:
08/22/23
ISBN:
1-683-96118-8
ISBN 13:
978-1-683-96118-5
Dewey:
Fic
Language:
English
Reviews:
Publishers Weekly
Higa’s English-language debut combines two volumes of short manga about the cartoonist’s native prefecture to form a reverently crafted patchwork-quilt portrait of his war-battered homeland. The first volume deals with Okinawa during WWII and its aftermath; the second is set in the postwar period of indefinite U.S. occupation. Higa mines his childhood: his mother dodges bombs while scavenging, his father is given a stick to fight a fleet of battleships. At war’s end, Allied soldiers bearing news of peace must convince holdouts in the hills not to kill themselves. In the later stories, small farming villages rely on American naval bases for funds, the background tensions adroitly drawn in a tale in which the characters must stop whatever activity they’re engaged in every few pages while a jet roars overhead. Throughout, the focus is on teachers, farmers, parents, and other ordinary people who persevere in a world bent on destruction. Higa’s linework is simple and clean, the landscapes rendered with the flat perspective of folk art, his figures stiff but drawn with affection. Suffusing his portraits with love, sorrow, and anger (but never bitterness), Higa brings the specifics of a complicated time and place to life as few artists have. (Aug.)
Okinawa brings together two collections of intertwined stories by the island's pre-eminent mangaka, Susumu Higa, which reflect on this difficult history and pull together traditional Okinawan spirituality, the modern-day realities of the continuing US military occupation, and the senselessness of the War. The first collection, Sword of Sand, is a ground level, unflinching look at the horrors of the Battle of Okinawa. Higa then turns an observant eye to the present-day in Mabui (Okinawan for 'spirit'), where he explores how the American occupation has irreversibly changed the island prefecture, through the lens of the archipelago's indigenous spirituality and the central character of the yuta priestess. Okinawa is a harrowing document of war, but it is also a work which addresses the dreams and the needs of a people as they go forward into an uncertain future, making it essential reading for anyone interested in World War II and its effects on our lives today, as well as anyone with an interest in the people and culture of this fascinating, complicated place. Though the work is thoroughly about one specific locale, the complex relations between Okinawan and Japanese identities and loyalties, between place and history, and between humanity and violence speak beyond borders and across shores. Please note: This book is a traditional work of manga and reads back to front and right to left.