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The Gate of Memory
Poems by Descendants of Nikkei Wartime Incarceration

An anthology of poetry on Nikkei incarceration, written by descendants of the WWII prisons and camps
A tribute to the 150,000 people harmed by the United States and Canada during WWII, this anthology is the first of its kind. The poetry expresses a range of experiences and perspectives from the afterlife of this historical yet enduring injustice. With a foreword by acclaimed poet, activist, and concentration camp survivor, Mitsuye Yamada, and an introduction by the editors, poets Brynn Saito and Brandon Shimoda, The Gate of Memory explores intergenerational trauma as the contributors, all of whom are descendants of those who were incarcerated, sift through an intimate record of wartime incarceration.
Contributors to this anthology include poets of Japanese American, Japanese Canadian, Okinawan American, Okinawan Canadian, Japanese Hawaiian, Alaska Native, mixed race Nikkei, and Japanese descent. Their poems reimagine, reinhabit, and retell the story of incarceration while embodying its many legacies, through a diversity of modes and themes, creating a panoramic portrait of anti-Asian racism, assimilation, loyalty, resistance, and redemption. The anthology illuminates individual perspectives and reveals collective experience. It insists upon the imperative of poetry in the processes of solidarity and transgenerational healing.

Reviews
  • Praise for Hydra Medusa by Brandon Shimoda

    “The essays, poems and talks in Hydra Medusa testify to the heroic dream-work of literary resistance in its many forms."

    —Srikanth Reddy, The Washington Post

    "Shimoda's book is a tour de force... a sometimes melancholic, sometimes incantatory meditation on the evil that people can do."

    —Gregory McNamee, 2024 Southwest Books of the Year

    "Brandon Shimoda is a mystic poet. Hydra Medusa is an otherworldly book."

    —Sean McCoy, The Brooklyn Rail

    Praise for Under a Future Sky by Brynn Saito

    “Brynn Saito writes with a rare, inimitable grace in her most personal and politically engaged book to date. I feel more alive after these poems…”

    —Lee Herrick, author of Scar and Flower

    “Lyrically lush and deeply wise, this book is both an intimate portrait and a summoning, a chance to hunt memory and recover history, still burning, still stone.”

    —Traci Brimhall, author of Come the Slumberless to the Land of Nod