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New York Newsday called this memoir of a warhood childhood in Japan one of the saddest and yet most uplifting books about childhood you will ever encounter.
Separated from her family in the confusion and horror of World War II, seven-year-old Tomiko Higa struggles to survive on the battlefield of Okinawa, Japan. There, as some of the fiercest fighting of the war rages around her, she must live alone, with nothing to fall back on but her own wits and daring. Fleeing from encroaching enemy forces, searching desperately for her lost sisters, taking scraps of food from the knapsacks of dead soldiers, risking death at every turn, Tomiko somehow finds the strength and courage to survive.
Many years later she decided to tell this story. Originally intended for juvenile readers, it is sure to move adults as well, because it is such a vivid portrait of the unintended civilian casualties of any war. One of the saddest yet most uplifting books about childhood you will ever encounter. ... A powerful document as well as a completely engrossing adventure. —Newsday
[A] moving memoir... All will be touched by Higa's tenacity under impossible circumstances and will be reminded that children continue to be the worst victims of war. —School Library Journal
. .. her unaffected memoir serves as a reminder that in any war, 'noncombatants' suffer grievously. —Los Angeles Times Book Review
A gripping story. —Mainichi Daily News
A testimony to the resilience of the human spirit. [It] is a short book that you will not be able to put down once you start to read it. —City life News
...an original, candid, and attention gripping autobiographical narrative which is superbly written and enthusiastically recommended... —BookwatchBorn in Okinawa,TOMIKO HIGAworked for twenty-seven years at the Okinawa brancl³Q
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