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Dolls of War

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When America and Japan go to war, will Macy's feelings for her beloved Japanese Friendship Doll change? A moving addition to the Friendship Dolls series.
In 1941, eleven-year-old Macy James lives near the Oregon coast with her father, the director of a small museum. Miss Tokyo, one of fifty-eight exquisite friendship dolls given to America by Japan in 1926, is part of the museum's collection — and one of Macy's most treasured connections to her mother, who recently passed away. When the Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor, many of Macy's neighbors demand that Miss Tokyo be destroyed. Macy promised her mother that she would take care of the doll, so against her father's wishes Macy hides Miss Tokyo to keep her safe. But when her brother joins the Navy and devastating news from the war begins to pour in, Macy starts having doubts — does remaining loyal to Miss Tokyo mean being disloyal to America? Bringing the story of the Friendship Dolls forward to World War II, Shirley Parenteau delivers another thoughtful historical novel inspired by a little-known true event.

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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2017
      A young white girl tries to hold onto a special Japanese doll in the racially charged aftermath of the Pearl Harbor bombings in this third book about the Friendship Dolls. Macy, 11, treasures Miss Tokyo, a near-life-size doll that resides in the small Oregon museum her father runs. One of several handcrafted dolls originally exchanged between Japan and America in 1926, Miss Tokyo, who wears an exquisite kimono and comes complete with a full set of culturally appropriate accessories, had reminded Macy's recently deceased mother of her own missionary childhood in Japan. As such, the doll provides one of Macy's only links to her mother's memory. With her 17-year-old brother freshly enlisted and her father distanced by grief, Macy writes her mother letters in the persona of Miss Tokyo. But now the country is at war with Japan, and anti-Japanese sentiment runs high. White townsfolk are pleased when their Japanese-American neighbors are rounded up by the government, and they want to burn Miss Tokyo. Macy struggles against a mob mentality--not always in realistic ways. Her emotional involvement with the doll is credible, but the greater emotional story--her father's physical abandonment of her in order to avoid telling her a hard truth--is glossed over in a way that feels dishonest. The story seems to be trying hard to provide substance, but readers will notice the effort it takes. (Historical fiction. 8-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2018
      Following the bombing of Pearl Harbor, eleven-year-old Macy is dismayed by the growing anti-Japanese sentiment in her Oregon town and becomes determined to stop the called-for destruction of a unique Japanese doll from her curator father's museum. Parenteau's third (later-set) book about the Friendship Dolls Exchange with Japan explores complications on the WWII American homefront; unfortunately, many aspects of the plot feel forced.

      (Copyright 2018 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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  • English

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