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Clark and Division
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
26 posts | 21 read | 26 to read
Set in 1944 Chicago, Edgar Award-winner Naomi Hiraharas eye-opening and poignant new mystery, the story of a young woman searching for the truth about her revered older sister's death, brings to focus the struggles of one Japanese American family released from mass incarceration at Manzanar during World War II. Chicago, 1944: Twenty-year-old Aki Ito and her parents have just been released from Manzanar, where they have been detained by the US government since the aftermath of Pearl Harbor, together with thousands of other Japanese Americans. The life in California the Itos were forced to leave behind is gone; instead, they are being resettled two thousand miles away in Chicago, where Akis older sister, Rose, was sent months earlier and moved to the new Japanese American neighborhood near Clark and Division streets. But on the eve of the Ito familys reunion, Rose is killed by a subway train. Aki, who worshipped her sister, is stunned. Officials are ruling Roses death a suicide. Aki cannot believe her perfect, polished, and optimistic sister would end her life. Her instinct tells her there is much more to the story, and she knows she is the only person who could ever learn the truth. Inspired by historical events, Clark and Division infuses an atmospheric and heartbreakingly real crime fiction plot with rich period details and delicately wrought personal stories Naomi Hirahara has gleaned from thirty years of research and archival work in Japanese American history.
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review
MonicaLoves2Read
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Mehso-so

Clark and Division tells the story of a Japanese family in America after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and sent to camps then onto Chicago. A sister is trying to find out what happened to her older sister that got to move to Chicago before they did. It was an okay mystery. Not great but still good. I will read the next book in the series, bc I do want to know a few things.

#readaway2024

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MindyK59
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

I read this book for my Book Club. It was a mystery within a historical fiction story. It was about a Japanese family that had lived in an internment camp after the attack on Pearl Harbor. When they were released they were sent to Chicago to start their new life. The older daughter went first to get everything ready. When the others arrived they found out she had died. The younger daughter went on a mission to find out what happened to her.

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KristiAhlers
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

I'm giving this a soft pick only because it's marketed as a mystery read but in reality it's more of a historic fiction read with mystery elements. If that makes sense. Otherwise, I enjoyed the story and the characters. A part of WWII that isn't discussed as much. #bookspin @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 1y
47 likes1 comment
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BarbaraTheBibliophage
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

This is a soft pick for me. The historical detail is great but writing and mystery aspect are just so-so. The MC is 20 but super sheltered, which makes cultural sense. New to Chicago after leaving the Japanese internment camps, she struggles with her older sister‘s untimely death. The author gets the often untold history right (my MIL was in the camps and then Chicago). The writing however is just meh.

Full review https://www.TheBibliophage.com

blurb
LKK526
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara

Thanks for the encouraging words.

bthegood 🌞 2y
3 likes1 comment
review
LKK526
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
Pickpick

After a selection slump, the library provided me with this book. Aki Ito and her mother and father are interred in a concentration camp in California during WW 2. Rose, Aki‘s older sister, secures early release and is sent to Chicago where she is making preparations for the remainder of her family to join her. This book is timely due to the subject of the ugliness of racism and touching on abortion while giving me a good story.

bthegood Glad you enjoyed it - sometimes it takes a while to get out of a slump - make a great day 🌞 2y
AmandaBlaze Reading Fervor by Alma Atsu, which also takes place in a Japanese concentration camp. It has a lot of Japanese folklore and supernatural elements. 2y
LKK526 @AmandaBlaze thanks📚 (edited) 2y
8 likes3 comments
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Litsi
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
Pickpick

There is a mystery to be solved in this novel, but it takes second seat to the tale of a Japanese American young woman whose life was severely disrupted by the WW2 internment. Some have complained that there‘s too much history, but there is quite a bit of heart too. Full review. https://www.facebook.com/1082882538/posts/10224460537235966/

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CaitlinR
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Mehso-so

Aki Ito and her family, interned in Manzanar, are resettled in Chicago. The eldest daughter arrived earlier, but was killed in an apparent accident. Aki believes she was murdered and tries to find the truth, which is far more complicated.

I found this to be an incoherent novel, which couldn‘t decide on a defining genre. As a result, the different characters and story lines get muddled. Ms Hirahara writes well, but did her characters no favors.

CaitlinR Photo from Displaced: Manzanar 1942 - 1945, published by T.Adler Books. 3y
21 likes1 comment
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CaitlinR
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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“Rose was always there, even while I was being born.”

#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

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Mitch
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

The American - Japanese experience during WW2 was a central theme of this book and clearly the author had done so much research to ensure she portrayed one truth to that experience - I learnt so much! However at times the insertion of historical details, context and histories didn‘t flow with the story and inconsistencies with the text were a little jarring at times.

71 likes1 stack add
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Mitch
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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The house is quiet, puppy is sleeping and I‘m snuggled under a blanket just turning to page one. Bliss!

82 likes2 stack adds
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Mitch
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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My goal for 2022 is to tackle some hefty history tomes….going to intersperse them with some new to me mystery series 👍🏼

TracyReadsBooks I really enjoyed Clark and Division—as much for its depiction of the lives of Japanese Americans in 1940s Chicago as for the mystery itself. Enjoy! 3y
Mitch @TracyReadsBooks I really love books with a strong sense of place. For me - it trumps plot! 3y
TracyReadsBooks @Mitch You should enjoy this book then. The author does a great job of bringing the city to life. 3y
64 likes1 stack add3 comments
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jlhammar
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

I liked this, but not nearly as much as I thought I would. Reads a bit YA (which is generally not my jam). Interesting to learn more about what life was like for Japanese Americans during WWII, particularly the forced relocation post-incarceration.

28 likes1 stack add
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charl08
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

Hirahara uses a murder mystery to frame her story of a Japanese-American family forced to relocate to Chicago in WW2. Lots of fascinating period detail, but light on the suspense.

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Amie
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

Interesting setting and characters: Japanese Americans released from prison camp during WWII are forced to relocate to Chicago.

EvieBee I really liked this one. 3y
37 likes1 stack add1 comment
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EvieBee
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

I feel grateful for all the research Hirahara did for this novel. I knew very little about Japanese American resettlement in the Midwest after life in concentration camps, like Manzanar. Barred from returning to their lives on the west coast, many wound up in Chicago taking on low wage jobs to keep afloat. Aki‘s story about life before internment and upon her family‘s release, hinges on the mysterious death of her sister, Rose.
⭐️⭐️⭐️ ½

45 likes3 stack adds
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EvieBee
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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EvieBee
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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I am loving this book, the #endpapers and the artful details throughout.

kspenmoll Looks lovely! 3y
EvieBee @kspenmoll Thank you! ♥️ 3y
65 likes5 stack adds3 comments
review
GerardtheBookworm
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

A sad part of Japanese American history. One year before the end of World War 2, Aki Ito and her family are sent from Manzinar and forced to relocate in Chicago. After her older sister, Rose, is killed in a subway accident near Clark and Division Street, Aki suspects foul play as she investigates racism, prejudice, and corruption in this historical mystery.

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Aims42
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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When your book and your current reading spot are a mood ❤️🖤🤍❤️🖤🤍❤️🖤🤍❤️🖤🤍❤️🖤🤍❤️🖤🤍❤️

Also, this book is AMAZING!! I‘m halfway through and I‘ve already written down another book from this author that I. Have. To. Read. ASAP! It‘s a library book for me, but I think I might buy my own copy 🤗

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mhillis
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Current reads: Map of Salt and Stars, Dead Dead Girls, A Burning

HEA or open-ended ending: Both are good!

Tag the last book added to your TBR: Clark and Division

#WeekendReads

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TracyReadsBooks
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Pickpick

The mystery is far less compelling than the opportunity it provides to examine the lives of Japanese Americans resettled in Chicago after being allowed to leave the internment camps out west in the 1940s. Extensively researched, this story about a young woman who must uncover the truth about her sister‘s death—the day before they were to be reunited—illuminates a fascinating period of history I knew little about. A good read. On sale 8/21.

EvieBee Yes, my thoughts exactly! 3y
18 likes1 stack add1 comment
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TracyReadsBooks
Clark and Division | Naomi Hirahara
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Today‘s book on the patio is a mystery set in 1944 Chicago and it tells the story of a Japanese American family after their release from WWII internment camps. I haven‘t read anything else by the author, who has won the Edgar Award for another series she wrote, but this one sounds very interesting. (I also love the old photograph of Michigan Ave. and Wacker Dr. on the cover—it looks very much the same today.)