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Forgiveness : a gift from my grandparents  Cover Image Book Book

Forgiveness : a gift from my grandparents / Mark Sakamoto.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781443417983 (trade paperback)
  • Physical Description: 245 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
  • Edition: Harper Perennial trade paperback edition.
  • Publisher: Toronto : Harper Perennial, 2015.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Originally published in hardcover: Toronto : HarperCollins, 2014.
Subject: Sakamoto, Mitsue > Family.
MacLean, Ralph > Family.
Japanese Canadians > Evacuation and relocation, 1942-1945.
World War, 1939-1945 > Prisoners and prisons, Japanese.
Japanese Canadians > Biography.
Prisoners of war > Canada > Biography.
Prisoners of war > Japan > Biography.
Genre: Biographies.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Lakeshore Branch 940.547271 Sak 31681010260628 NONFICPBK Available -

  • HARPERCOLL

    WINNER of CBC Canada Reads

    Finalist for the Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction and the OLA Evergreen Award

    #1 National Bestseller

    When the Second World War broke out, Ralph MacLean chose to escape his troubled life on the Magdalen Islands in eastern Canada and volunteer to serve his country overseas. Meanwhile, in Vancouver, Mitsue Sakamoto saw her family and her stable community torn apart after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

    Like many young Canadian soldiers, Ralph was captured by the Japanese army. He would spend the war in prison camps, enduring pestilence, beatings and starvation, as well as a journey by hell ship to Japan to perform slave labour, while around him his friends and countrymen perished. Back in Canada, Mitsue and her family were expelled from their home by the government and forced to spend years eking out an existence in rural Alberta, working other people's land for a dollar a day.

    By the end of the war, Ralph emerged broken but a survivor. Mitsue, worn down by years of back-breaking labour, had to start all over again in Medicine Hat, Alberta. A generation later, at a high school dance, Ralph's daughter and Mitsue's son fell in love.

    Although the war toyed with Ralph's and Mitsue's lives and threatened to erase their humanity, these two brave individuals somehow surmounted enormous transgressions and learned to forgive. Without this forgiveness, their grandson Mark Sakamoto would never have come to be.


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