While World War II America is often portrayed in super-heroic terms, there was a lot of shady business going on. Gaijin brings to life in graphic form, I believe for the first time, a bit of this horrifying American history -- the imprisonment of Japanese Americans in internment camps after Pearl Harbor and through the end of the war.
Gaijin opens with a gorgeous two-page spread, the Golden Gate bridge bird's eye view, dotted with foggy clouds and soaked in the blues of sky and water. Gulls fly toward us. Cars and trucks cross the bridge, smaller than dimes, driving in and out of the fog. A chronologically appropriate airplane flies not too far above the bridge, and just above it sits one caption, reading: "Sunday, December 7, 1941. San Francisco, CA. It's Koji Miyamoto's 13th birthday."
Koji, protagonist of "Gaijin", San Francisco resident and the son of a white mother and Japanese father, doesn't get to enjoy his birthday for long. A few panels into the book he turns on the radio and hears that Pearl Harbor has been attacked by Japan. He's flabbergasted and flummoxed. "I don't get it. Why would they attack Pearl Harbor? It's out in the middle of nowhere." His mother looks very worried and, with equal innocence admits she has no clue. Immediately Koji begins to worry about his father, who is in Japan taking care of his own sick father. "Could he be one of the fighter pilots?" He asks his mom. And his mother remarks a bit questionably "Are you kidding? He can barely ride in a train car, let alone fly a plane."
That night Koji dreams anxiously of his father as fighter pilot. He can't comprehend what it means for his father to be in Japan at a time when Japan is attacking America. He seems to almost wonder, does he really know his father at all? Is it possible his father is attacking America and therefore, attacking him?
These dream sequences come up often in the book and I appreciate the work they do in this story, shedding both a humorous and sober light on Koji's troubled inner world, while at the same time offering him a moments of connection with his beloved father. In Koji's daily life we often don't get that emotional richness because he spends most of his time defending himself against the hostility of peers, police, bus drivers.
Before long, Koji and his mother are interned in a camp. The events leading up to this are stressful for Koji and his mother and their dynamic around it, their relationship in general, is a bit confusing to me. I'm not sure what the author was going for. Maybe he was trying to show that in some ways, even though what they are going through together is extraordinary, they are still going through the typical struggles parents and their teenagers go through? But I didn't find it so believable and I wasn't reading a story so much as a series of dramatic scenes meant to highlight some of the more difficult parts and seminal moments of their pre-internment experience.
We witness their great losses, of status, home, any accumulated wealth. At least once they arrive at the camp there seems to be some possibility of relief from social persecution. Finally the kids his age won't call him names and accuse him of being their mortal enemy on a daily basis. But as it turns out, Koji is treated as a foreigner and enemy in the camp, too, because his mother is white. The other kids call him "Gaijin", a derogatory word meaning "foreigner."
Once in the camp we meet Mr. Asai, who helps Koji and his mother adjust and offers support. He is the archetypal wise, grandfatherly type, taking Gaijin under his wing. Still, Koji spends his days in a perpetual state of frustration and fury as the other kids pick on him and call his mother a floozy. He goes into rages a lot as he wonders if his mother really is a floozy and if she is cheating on his father with white officers patrolling the camp. He starts to hang out with the teenagers even though they're jerks and make him do dangerous things. And then some stuff happens. And then, the book abruptly ends.
While the art in this book is fantastic, and the subject matter important, the story is frustratingly under-developed. The characters don't fully come to life, and during Koji's time in the first camp (at the end of the book they are to be moved to another one), "Gaijin" is overly focused on Koji's obsession with his mother's fidelity to his father. Clearly Koji is going through a lot, but the book shows his fury in a kind of haphazard and unprocessed way and the events can feel repetitive and undirected. Though there are several smaller story arcs, there isn't really a big one pulling this all together.