Saturday, June 11, 2011

Steadily Reading Saturday...Debut!

Steadily Reading Saturday is starting up as of today (button/badge to come very soon)...a weekly meme I will be doing to highlight what I am "steadily reading," because we all know that Saturdays lend themselves to curling up with a good book - especially when it is 100 degrees outside as it is today!

This Saturday I am steadily reading Heart of a Samurai by Margi Preus. This book is our next book club book for our teacher book club "The Litwits." It is also a 2011 Newberry Honor Book.

Book Summary:

In 1841, a Japanese fishing vessel sinks. Its crew is forced to swim to a small, unknown island, where they are rescued by a passing American ship. Japan’s borders remain closed to all Western nations, so the crew sets off to America, learning English on the way.

Manjiro, a fourteen-year-old boy, is curious and eager to learn everything he can about this new culture. Eventually the captain adopts Manjiro and takes him to his home in New England. The boy lives for some time in New England, and then heads to San Francisco to pan for gold. After many years, he makes it back to Japan, only to be imprisoned as an outsider. With his hard-won knowledge of the West, Manjiro is in a unique position to persuade the shogun to ease open the boundaries around Japan; he may even achieve his unlikely dream of becoming a samurai.

*STARRED review from Booklist*


Manjiro is 14 when a freak storm washes him and his four fishing companions onto a tiny island far from their Japanese homeland. Shortly before starving, they are rescued by an American whaling ship. But it’s 1841 and distrust is rampant: the Japanese consider the whalers “barbarians,” while the whalers think of the Japanese as “godless cannibals.” Captain William Whitfield is different—childless, he forges a bond with the boy, and when it comes time for Manjiro to choose between staying with his countrymen or going to America as Whitfield’s son, he picks the path of adventure. It’s a classic fish-out-of-water story (although this fish goes into the water repeatedly), and it’s precisely this classic structure that gives the novel the sturdy bones of a timeless tale. Backeted by gritty seafaring episodes—salty and bloody enough to assure us that Preus has done her research—the book’s heart is its middle section, in which Manjiro, allegedly the first Japanese to set foot in America, deals with the prejudice and promise of a new world. By Japanese tradition, Manjiro was destined to be no more than a humble fisherman, but when his 10-year saga ends, he has become so much more. Wonderful back matter helps flesh out this fictionalized companion to the same true story told in Rhoda Blumberg’s Shipwrecked! The True Adventures of a Japanese Boy (2001).

4 comments:

  1. Hi, Lindsay! Thanks for commenting on my blog, and then becoming a follower! I'm now following you back!

    This book sure sounds fascinating! And it's based on a true story, too! Gotta add it to my ever-growing TBR pile....

    Thanks for sharing!! : )

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  2. So kind of like a little mini-readathon every Saturday - right? I like! My day for this would likely be Sunday. Belle

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  3. Wow, I haven't heard of this book. It sounds fabulous. I'm definitely going to have to look it up.

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  4. Thank you for this excellent & thoughtful post, so full of ideas that I have printed it out so i can read again..
    Essay Writing

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