Julie Otsuka
Julie Otsuka (born May 15, 1962) is a Japanese painter and writer. She is known for drawing from her personal life to write autoethnographical historical novels about the life of Japanese Americans. In 2002 she published her first novel, ''When the Emperor was Divine'', which is about the Japanese-American internment camps that took place in 1942-45 during World War II. The story begins in California, where she was born and raised, and it is based on Otsuka's grandfather who was arrested as a suspected spy for Japan the day after Pearl Harbor. Her novel, in 2003, received an award from the Asian American Literary Award and American Library Association Alex Award. Otsuka continued to write about her family's history and in 2011 published her second novel, ''The Buddha in the Attic'', that takes place in the early 1900s, and it discusses the marriages of Japanese women who immigrated to the United States to marry men they knew only through photographs. These women are known as "picture brides" for this reason. During this year, she also published a short story titled "Diem Perdidi," that translates to "I have lost the day," which dives into a more personal space as it is based on her mother who had frontotemporal dementia. This short story was the beginning of her third novel published in 2022 titled, ''The Swimmers'', which further relates her experience as the daughter of a mother with frontotemporal dementia. Provided by Wikipedia-
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Literature
Japanese Americans
Dementia
Domestic fiction
Forced removal and internment, 1942-1945
Historical fiction
History
Internment camps
Japanese
Japanese American families
Large type books
Mail order brides
Mothers and daughters
Nazi concentration camps
Patients
Swimmers
War stories
World War, 1939-1945
American fiction
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Short stories, American