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This is the Small Press Exchange mirror for Ahadada Books, which reposts notable announcements from the Ahadada Site for the Small Press Exchange Community. Ahadada Books publishes titles both online and in print. We present broadsides, limited-run chapbooks, and perfect bound books of diverse literary forms.
Masako's Story; Surviving the Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima by Kikuko Otake Ahadada Books, 96 pages, Perfect bound Paperback, $12.50 ISBN 978-0-9781414-6-2 Soon to be available from SPD.
For a downloadable PDF of this Press Release, click here.
On August 6, 1945, when the world's first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, the Furuta family was living one mile away from the hypocenter. Five year old Kikuko, her mother, Masako, and her two brothers barely escaped with their lives. However, their soldier father was not so fortunate. Masakonever talked about her family's experiences on that day and the grim days following the bombing. Then one day, Masako started to talk about what happened-breaking a silence of nearly fifty years.
Written by Kikuko (Furuta) Otake, now an assistant professor of Japanese in the United States, Masako's story is a bilingual collection of prose-poetry, based on the true story of her family's tragedy. The appendix presents the original Japanese poetry written to capture the story as her mother said it in Hiroshima dialect. Moreover, the English translation is written with an "Objectivist" lineation similar in its understated power to Charles Reznikoff's "Testimony":
After crossing the Aoi Bridge, I walked diagonally across the grounds of the Gokoku Shrine To take a short cut. Oh. That ground was filled with hundreds of people with horrible burns Scattered everywhere. Many of them were dead. But those that still lived, Begged, "Mizu! Mizu o kudasai," in faint whispers. Soon my way was blocked by their outstretched arms. One of them even grabbed my ankle, though feebly, To stop me from running past him. His burnt skin sloughed off his fingers, As I pulled from his grip.
(pg. 23).
Kikuko Otake's Masako's Story is a powerful addition to the literature of the Atomic Bomb, and yet more evidence that we should all work together to stop the Nuclear madness.
Coming soon from Ahadada Books — Masako’s Story: Surviving the Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima
On August 6, 1945, when the world’s first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, the Furuta family was living about one mile away from the hypocenter. Five-year-old Kikuko, her mother, Masako, and her two brothers barely escaped with their lives. However, their soldier father was not so fortunate. Masako never talked about her family’s experiences on that day and the days following the bombing. Then one day, Masako started to talk about what happened — breaking a silence of nearly fifty years . . .
Kikuko (Kay) Otake was five years old when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, August 6, 1945. In her book Masako's Story (forthcoming from Ahadada), she offers a survivor's perspective.
Professor Kikuko (Kay) Otake was born on February 22, 1940 in Osaka, Japan. She earned her B.A. from Tsuda College of Tokyo, Japan in 1962 in English Literature. In August of 1968, she came to the US and in September 1987 earned her M.A. in Education from California State University in Los Angeles.
Professor Otake is an award-winning poet who regularly publishes tanka and haiku.
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