Imprisoned Spiral-Bound | 2020-02-18

Martin W. Sandler

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Available in paperback for the first time, Martin W. Sandler's award-winning book about Japanese-American internment camps.

While Americans fought for freedom and democracy abroad, fear and suspicion towards Japanese Americans swept the country after Japan's sneak attack on Pearl Harbor. Culling information from extensive, previously unpublished interviews and oral histories with Japanese American survivors of internment camps, Martin W. Sandler gives an in-depth account of their lives before, during their imprisonment, and after their release. Bringing readers inside life in the internment camps and explaining how a country that is built on the ideals of freedom for all could have such a dark mark on its history, this in-depth look at a troubling period of American history sheds light on the prejudices in today's world and provides the historical context we need to prevent similar abuses of power.

Publisher: Macmillan
Original Binding: Trade Paperback
Pages: 176 pages
ISBN-10: 1547604697
Item Weight: 1.6 lbs
Dimensions: 8.6 x 0.5 x 10.6 inches
A YALSA Nonfiction Award Finalist
"Beautifully illustrated with well-chosen photographs and other documents, this handsome book offers a clear view of an episode in American history that still receives too little focus." ?Booklist, starred review
"A must-have."--School Library Journal

Martin W. Sandler is the award-winning author of 1919 The Year That Changed Anerica, Imprisoned, Lincoln Through the Lens, The Dust Bowl Through the Lens, and Kennedy Through the Lens. He has won five Emmy Awards for his writing for television and is the author of more than sixty books, two of which have been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize and four of which were YALSA-Nonfiction Award finalists. Sandler has taught American history and American studies at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and at Smith College, and lives in Massachusetts.