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Speak, Okinawa: A Memoir
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77/99
Critics
75/99
Readers
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Scholars
70/99
Rating
84/99
Volume
75/99
Rating
75/99
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About This Book
A "hauntingly beautiful memoir about family and identity" (NPR) and a young woman's journey to understanding her complicated parents—her mother an Okinawan war bride, her father a Vietnam veteran—and her own, fraught cultural heritage. Elizabeth's mother was working as a nightclub hostess on U.S.-occupied Okinawa when she met the American soldier who would become her husband. The language barrier and power imbalance that defined their early relationship followed them to the predominantly white, upstate New York suburb where they moved to raise their only daughter. There, Elizabeth grew up with the trappings of a typical American childhood and adolescence. Yet even though she felt almost no connection to her mother's distant home, she also felt out of place among her peers. Decades later, Elizabeth comes to recognize the shame and self-loathing that haunt both her and her mother, and attempts a form of reconciliation, not only to come to terms with the embattled dynamics of her family but also to reckon with the injustices that reverberate throughout the history of Okinawa and its people. Clear-eyed and profoundly humane, Speak, Okinawa is a startling accomplishment—a heartfelt exploration of identity, inheritance, forgiveness, and what it means to be an American.
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Reviews
"strongest when Brina is recounting, with piercing candidness and clarity, the almost claustrophobic world of an only child and her parents — their shifting allegiances, the wounds they inflict on each other and their rocky path toward acceptance, apology and forgiveness."
"Speak, Okinawa is both a mediation on Brina's own family as well as a powerful history of the United States occupation of Okinawa, where it maintains a massive military presence to this day ..."
"The family story is interwoven with the mind-bendingly unfortunate history of Okinawa, which is recounted here in fascinating, vivid historical asides ..."
"military's colonization of Okinawa and her father's family's disrespect toward her mom ..."
"Brina's awareness of her faults is as refreshing as it is hard to read."
"These episodes inform the rest of Brina's forthright and tunneling inquiry into how she came to understand the many inherited layers of herself and her racial identity."
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