Blossoms and Bayonets: A Story of Love, Faith and Courage under Japanese Occupation
5/5
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About this ebook
Hi-Dong Chai and Jana McBurney-Lin, the award-winning author of My Half of the Sky, turn their hands to a remarkable story of a family and country torn apart by outside forces.
The time is 1942, the place, Japanese-occupied Seoul, Korea. Fifteen-year-old He-Seung is full of fire, ready to take on these Japanese…if only he could convince his father, a Christian minister more concerned about saving his flock in a time when Emperor-worship has become mandatory. Since occupation, the Japanese have eradicated the Korean language, names, even the country's flower. Now they are seeking Korean boys as volunteers for their army. When his father is arrested by the Japanese, however, He-Seung must swallow his hatred of the enemy. Even harder, he must leave his mother and baby brother He-Dong to fend for themselves.
Based on a true story, Blossoms & Bayonets is suffused with the tense atmosphere of the period. The story lends an eyewitness perspective to events as they unfold,revealing an era of nuance and complexity. The result is a work that speaks volumes about how and why one war led to the next.
Jana McBurney-Lin
Jana lived in Asia for fifteen years. She wrote for media in seven countries, including National Public Radio, Writer's Digest, Hemispheres (United Airlines), Islands Magazine, Singapore Straits Times, Japan Times and dozens of others. She was an editor at ALC Publishing in Tokyo when she met her husband, a native of southern China. They then lived in Singapore, frequently visiting his family in Fujian province, China. Jana now lives in the Santa Cruz mountains of California with her husband and four children. She's a dedicated participant in the Bay Area writing community, having served five years as President of the Peninsula Branch of the California Writer's Club. She also founded the Writers Camp for Kids and volunteers annually in the local schools to teach creative writing.
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Reviews for Blossoms and Bayonets
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a fantastic book and I hope it finds a wide readership. I think it would spark some great discussion in high school or college history or literature courses (or for home schoolers). It is certainly an important addition to the genre of war literature.
Blossoms and Bayonets is historical fiction based on the life of coauthor Hi-Dong Chai who was a boy in Seoul, Korea during World War II.
The novel opens on February 23, 1942 and ends on November 1, 1945. The story is told through three main characters:
*He-Seung, a sixteen year old high school boy who is full of anger primarily towards the Japanese who are attempting to eradicate Korean culture and superimpose their own culture. He is also angry at his father, a Christian pastor who seems to He-Seung like he is doing nothing to oppose the Japanese yet he doesn't come close to sparing the rod on his own children.
*Baby He-Dong, He-Seung's younger brother who is in 2nd grade at the start of the novel and a bit of a mamma's boy in his older brother's eyes. He-Dong tries to honor is father, mother, and older brother. He lives in fear of almost everyone and is tormented by the fear of not doing the right thing and God punishing his family as a result. My heart went out to him for this--whatever brand of Christianity his father followed, it wasn't one that gave a young boy comfort.
*Mother (Uhmony), an obedient wife and loving mother. At the beginning of the book she's a bit of a doormat, doing her best to serve her husband and sons (there are three sons total, the eldest is off studying) and not thinking much beyond the congregation that her husband oversees. Like many women of her time and station, she's illiterate. The changes happening around her are confusing, but after her husband is arrested she's forced to start taking some initiative on her own.
This is a story what one family and their friends endure during foreign occupation and war. However, it's not simply a series of horrible vignettes, but rather shows how each family member coped with what they were dealt and how they were changed by what they experienced as individuals and collectively. He-Seung, He-Dong, and Mother are characters I'll not forget anytime soon.
There is so much packed into this book, yet it reads smoothly: how the Japanese attempt to control the Koreans--from making them take out their Rose of Sharon and planting Cherry Blossoms, to forbidding the speaking of Korean in school, to mandating only the Emperor of Japan be worshiped-- the atrocity of Japanese comfort woman, the place of women in Korean society and in the family, sibling relations & hierarchy, the building of the railroad along the Burma border (think of the movie Bridge on the River Kwai), the fierce fighting on Okinawa, the coverup of Japanese bombing in Oregon, the US reneging on freeing Korea and giving half to Russia, and the attraction of communism are just some of the historical realities woven into the story.
The Korean folk tale of the Story Bag plays a big role, both directly and symbolically.
The chapters are short and alternate between the three characters making the book compulsively readable. Quotes from historians and the big players of the day begin each chapter which gives context to the chapter and the book over-all. You get a feel for the attitude and prejudices of the period.
But mainly it's caring about these characters that made the book one I couldn't wait to get back to reading. It also whetted my appetite to learn more about Korean history and for some kimchee!
(Received review copy from TLC Book Tours for a fair and honest review)