Monday, February 28, 2011

Our Region Reads: Let’s Read, Let’s Talk

Author of ‘Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet Coming’ to North Idaho in March
Editor's Note: This article was published on the front page of the North Idaho Life section of the Coeur d'Alene Press on Friday, Feb. 25.


Author Jamie Ford in Bud’s Jazz Records in Seattle. The store closed in 2008.

The libraries of North Idaho have joined forces for Our Region Reads – a reading program designed to encourage area residents to read and talk about books by focusing on a single title and author each year.
The selection for 2011 is “Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet,” by Jamie Ford, a novel about a boy of Chinese heritage growing up in Seattle at the beginning of WWII and his relationship with a Japanese-American girl who would be caught up in the forced relocation of Japanese families.
The background music for “Hotel” is the sound of jazz being played in Seattle’s clubs and homes in the 1940s.
Ford is the great-grandson of Nevada mining pioneer Min Chung, who emigrated from Kaiping, China, to San Francisco in 1865, where he adopted the western name “Ford,” thus confusing countless generations. An award-winning short-story writer, Ford is an alumnus of the Squaw Valley Community of Writers and a survivor of Orson Card’s Literary Boot Camp.  Having grown up near Seattle’s Chinatown, he now lives in Montana.
Ford will come to North Idaho in March as part of the related programs that will also look at the region’s role in World War Two, jazz, the Japanese Internment, the influence of Asian cultures in the Inland Northwest, and any number of related subjects.  
The author recently responded to questions about his work and background:
Press: Your character Henry Lee was the only Chinese student in his school and was subject to bullying by fellow students and sometimes hostility from his teachers. Did you experience anything like this growing up? And if so, how did you respond.
Jamie: I always feel like this is where I’m supposed to reveal some great Horatio Alger moment of my childhood, but honestly, I really didn’t encounter much bullying or racism, at least not to the degree depicted in the book—probably because my last name is Ford, which can be confusing. Plus my dad was fairly well known, and he taught martial arts to police officers. That knowledge always helps in the bully-prevention department. Though there was one summer when my family traveled to Arkansas (where my mother was from). I remember my parents warning me that people might stare or say things—there was definitely a concern about my father, a Chinese man, and his Caucasian wife traveling to the “deep south.”
Press: Did members of your family ever talk about their experiences during WWII? What was their attitude toward the relocation and internment of Japanese-Americans?
Jamie: My dad wore one of the “I Am Chinese” buttons depicted in the book. His cousins did as well. He talked about walking to school and kids throwing rocks at him and calling him a “Jap” — that kind of thing. He would end up throwing the rocks back and getting into fistfights. He also talked about going to school and seeing a lot of empty desks after his Japanese classmates had been taken away. But I don’t think there was a lot of enmity toward the Japanese in my immediate family. My dad’s cousin married a Japanese woman, and my dad married a woman who was by my definition, “Betty Crocker White.” We were ahead of the curve, I guess.
Press: When you were living in Seattle was the Japanese-American removal and the elimination of Japantown discussed as part of the local history?
Jamie: There’s definitely an institutional memory of the Internment in Seattle—especially since there are so many families living there who were directly affected by it –  either Japanese families, or their neighbors, classmates, co-workers, etc. But it can still be a delicate subject. There was a wall of silence that began to crumble in the ’80s, with reparations, and the next generation finally asking questions. 
Press: Jazz plays a big role in “Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet.” Is this also one of your passions?
Jamie: I get asked that a lot. Honestly, (true confession time), I’m more of a blues guy — I love Buddy Guy, Taj Mahal, Eric Bibb, etc. But I do have a fascination with the jazz scene at the time. Back when Count Bassie and Duke Ellington would hit Seattle on a West Coast swing. Back then jazz was vibrant and alive — there were jazz orchestras, which later became quartets, and shrank to trios, and tinkling piano bars. Now when you think of jazz in Seattle you tend to think of Kenny G, which breaks my heart.
Press: What was involved in your research about life in Japantown and later in the relocation camps? Did you visit any of the places where the camps were located?
Jamie: I had visited Minidoka and knew how arid that part of Idaho is — and it was even more so back then, when it was dry farmland, sans irrigation. And I had been to the Puyallup Fairgrounds countless times, but had never known it had once been a temporary detention center. But beyond the places themselves, I spent a lot of time doing research at the Wing Luke Asian Museum in Seattle, and also joined Densho, a foundation dedicated to preserving the oral history of the Internment. Both were incredible resources.
Press: What influenced you to become a writer?
Jamie: I actually labored in the salt mines of advertising for years. But in advertising you’re really selling your creative soul by the pound. So I began writing fiction on the side, just so I’d have this creative sandbox unrelated to my day-job — for my own sanity. I found that I wanted to spend more and more time in that sandbox, until ultimately, I moved into the sandbox.
Press: What is the most challenging thing for you about being an author?
Jamie: Well, as I’m writing this I’m sitting on an airplane bound for Florida. Keeping up with all the travel has been a challenge — as a newbie author I’m profoundly grateful for all the attention HOTEL has received, but I do have those moments where I wake up and have to remember what city I’m in. 
Press: Who were the authors you enjoyed reading as you were growing up and who are you reading now?
Jamie: People often ask if I grew up reading Raymond Carver, since I lean toward minimalism in my writing, and my answer is always, “No, I read that other great minimalist, Isaac Asimov.” I read tons of Science Fiction as a kid, and comics too — so Stan Lee was my hero. But I’m also a theater geek, so I read Shakespeare. (Instead of a wedding reception we took 70 people to “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”).
These days my favorite authors are probably Pat Conroy and Sherman Alexie, though the one author that has haunted my imagination from adolescence to adulthood is the great Harlan Ellison.
Press: You live in Montana now. What is your life like there? Is there anything in particular about the area that interests you as a writer.
Jamie: Living in Great Falls, Montana is like living in 1977, which if you think about it, was a fantastic year: “Star Wars” premiered, the Atari was born, and the Clash’s first album was released. It’s like perpetually living in the best year of my childhood. Plus, I travel so much for book events anyway that I get my big city fix on the regular; it’s nice to come home and be off the grid. There are a lot of writers in Montana. It’s where we go to hide.
Press: What are you working on now?
Jamie: I just finished editing my second book, which was like giving birth to a nine-pound baby, sideways. But it’s finally delivered. It’s another historical, multi-cultural love story, set in Seattle and Japan. It’s tentatively titled “Songs from the Book of Souls.”
No release date yet, but I think we’re looking at early 2012, so stay tuned…
More information about Jamie Ford can be found at his website: http://www.jamieford.com/my-debut-novel-from-ballantine/

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Our Region Reads Calendar of Events

Minidoka Camp Exhibit Touring Regional Libraries: Through March

Historian Robert Sims: Idaho Humanities Speakers Bureau, “Minidoka Internment Camp.” Feb. 24, 3 p.m., Golden Spike Community Center; Feb. 25, 3 p.m., Spirit Lake Library, 6 p.m. Athol Library; Feb. 26, 2 p.m.,  Hayden Library.

Priscilla Wegars: Idaho Humanities Speakers Bureau, "Imprisoned in Paradise:

Jamie Ford discussion with area book group members: (by invitation only), March 15, 2 p.m., Post Falls Library.

Jamie Ford Q&A with local high school students: March 16, 9 a.m., Lake City High School.

3Cs Book Club Discussion: March 16, 10 a.m., Coeur d’Alene Resort.

Jamie Ford Discussion and Q&A: March 16, 7 p.m., Coeur d’Alene Library Community Room.

Bitter Sweet Memories: Music of the Second World War with vocals by Rut Pratt, March 18, 7:00 p.m., Jacklin Cultural Center, Post Falls, tickets $20.

Pageturners Library Book Club: Discussion (open to any adult reader), March 23, 10:15 a.m., Coeur d’Alene Library Community Room.

 Living Voices – “Within the Silence:” A one-woman show characterizing the forced relocation of Japanese-American to internment camps. Sponsored by the Human Rights Education Institute, March 23, 11 a.m., Dalton Elementary School; 1 p.m. Sorenson Magnet School; 7 p.m., public program Coeur d’Alene Library Community Room. March 24, 1:30 p.m., Twin Lakes School, 7 p.m., public program Post Falls Library.

Our Region Reads is supported in part by a grant from the Idaho Humanities Council as part of the "We the People Initiative" of the National Endowment for the Humanities with additional support from the Friends of the Library at Post Falls, Hayden and Coeur d’Alene libraries. Community Partners include the Jacklin Cultural Center and the Human Rights Education Institute. Additional information about Our Region Reads is available at www.ourregionreads.blogspot.com.
Japanese Road
Workers at the Kooskia Internment Camp." March 8, 7 p.m., Hayden Library; March 9, 6 p.m., Spirit Lake Library; March 10, 7 p.m., Post Falls Library; March 11, 6 p.m., Athol Library; March 12, 2 p.m., Coeur d’Alene Library, 5 p.m., Pinehurst Library.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Programs Share Life in Internment Camp

       History professor Robert Sims, with the Idaho Humanities Council Speakers Bureau, offers a presentation on the Minidoka Internment Camp in four communities as part of the Our Region Reads project.
Robert Sims

Sims will speak and present a slideshow at 3 p.m., Feb. 24 at the Golden Spikes Community Center, 8580 W. Yosemite, in Rathdrum; 3 p.m., Feb. 25 at the Spirit Lake Library,
32575 N. Fifth Ave.
; 6 p.m., Feb. 25, at the Athol Library, 30399 Third St.; and at 2 p.m., Feb. 26, at the Hayden Library, 8385 N. Government Way.
During World War II the United States Government removed the entire Japanese American population from the West Coast and relocated them to 10 camps in the interior. One of these camps was Camp Minidoka in south central Idaho. This camp was also called Hunt, and held nearly 10,000 people of Japanese ancestry during the war.
This camp had a great impact on Idaho during the war years and was an important part of both Idaho and United States History. In 2001, it was designated as a National Monument, and plans are being developed for the site.
Sims is professor of History Emeritus and former Dean of the College of Social Sciences and Public Affairs at Boise State University. He received his Ph.D. in American History from the University of Colorado.
Sims received a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship in Ethnic Studies at Columbia University. He served on the Idaho Humanities Council for four years and has participated in many projects funded by the NEH and the Idaho Humanities Council, including multi-state projects dealing with ethnic groups in the west.
He has served as a consultant to the Four Rivers Cultural Center, Ontario, Ore., and now serves on the board of the Friends of Minidoka, a support group for the Minidoka Interment National Monument. In 2004 he received the Outstanding Achievement in the Humanities award, given annually by the IHC.
Our Region Reads is a cooperative effort by area libraries to encourage the residents of North Idaho to read together a shared book and to enjoy educational and cultural events related to that book. The selection for 2011 is “The Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet,” by Jamie Ford.
This program is supported in part by a grant from the Idaho Humanities Council as part of the "We the People Initiative" of the National Endowment for the Humanities with additional support from the Friends of the Library at Post Falls, Hayden and Coeur d’Alene libraries. Information about Our Region Reads is available at local libraries.