![]() ![]() Most were Korean, although Japanese and Filipina women also suffered. It was only in 1993 that the Japanese government acknowledged the existence of comfort women this despite the fact that the United Nations estimates that 200,000 women were forced into sexual slavery for the Japanese army. This book is fighting a battle that didn’t end with the surrender of Japan in 1945. Indeed, the book forces us to confront the inescapability of these traumas. He stole her from her seaside home, from everything she knows and loves, and then raped her.” These events have already been described in detail, but Hana obsessively goes over them again in her mind. For example: “Anger and fear swarm through her body, radiating in hot waves to the soldier beside her. Bracht rejects the old mantra of show, don’t tell her characters’ pain is shown, told, shown and told again. The language is blunt, with every page shouting of wrongs perpetrated. ![]() Hana’s narrative covers the war years, while in Emi’s chapters it is 2011, and the elderly Emi is still looking for her sister. ![]() Hana is dragged away by a Japanese soldier to a life of sexual slavery Emi is left to grow up wondering what happened to her sister. White Chrysanthemum is the story of two Korean sisters separated by the second world war. ![]() G eorge Orwell taught us that all writing is political: Mary Lynn Bracht’s debut novel is forthrightly so. ![]()
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