Monday, April 30, 2012

Book Beat - Bridge of Scarlet Leaves

Readers often ask for recommendations of other novels set during World War II, and I love to refer them to Kristina McMorris's books. Her first novel, Letters from Home, grabbed me, and her second novel, Bridge of Scarlet Leaves, is even better.

Before I'd read her work, Kristina and I had started exchanging research resources, and I found a kindred spirit. Her love for research spills over on every page of Bridge of Scarlet Leaves. She gets the details right without ever making it sound like a history tome.

In Bridge of Scarlet Leaves, Maddie Kern dreams of becoming a concert violinist while her brother T.J. dreams of a career in professional baseball. Unknown to T.J., Maddie has fallen in love with his lifelong best friend, Lane Moritomo, a Japanese-American. In California, interracial marriages were illegal, so the couple elopes to Seattle and gets married. On December 6, 1941.

The next day the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor. American-born Lane and his family find themselves on the wrong side of the racial divide. T.J. is infuriated that his best friend betrayed him and married his sister behind his back, and he enlists in the Army Air Forces. While Lane insists Maddie must divorce him, she chooses to follow him to the relocation camp at Manzanar.

The story takes you from Los Angeles, to the dust of Manzanar, to a B-17 bomber over Hawaii, to a banzai charge in the Aleutians, to a critical moment in the Philippines. The research is impeccable, the characters are realistically drawn and thoroughly relatable, and the story is gripping. I highly recommend this novel.

**Caution to my more sensitive readers: this is a mainstream novel and includes coarse language. There are a handful of mildly sensual scenes within a marriage and very tastefully written.

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 30, 1942: First use of US P-39 Airacobra fighter plane in combat—from Australia. USS Peto, first sub built on Great Lakes, launched at Manitowoc, WI. Japanese secure central Burma.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 29, 1942: Jews in Vichy France and the Netherlands required to wear stars. Japanese take Lashio in Burma, cutting Burma Road and blockading China.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 28, 1942: Coastal dim-outs go into effect in 15-mile strip on East Coast, around New York City. US Office of Price Administration freezes prices of all essential items.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 27, 1942: Explosion at Japanese mine in Manchuria kills 1527—worst mine disaster ever. In US, registration begins for upcoming sugar rationing. In plebiscite, Canadian voters approve conscription for service, except voters in Quebec.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 26, 1942: German Reichstag gives Hitler absolute power, removes all legal restrictions on him.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 25, 1942: British Princess Elizabeth registers for youth war service. New song in Top Ten: “Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree with Anyone Else but Me.”

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 24, 1942: German paratroopers take Greek islands of Samothrace, Limnos, and Thasos.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 23, 1942: Luftwaffe bombs Exeter in first of “Baedeker Raid,” bombings of British historical sites listed in the Baedeker guides. As the Japanese advance, Chinese Sixth Army retreats from Burma back into China.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 22, 1942: US 10th Air Force begins regular air supply service over the “Hump” between India and China.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 21, 1942: President Roosevelt orders seizure of all patents held by enemy nations.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 20, 1942: US Post Office restricts size, weight, and frequency of overseas mail. Germans restrict access to the beach in Holland.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 19, 1942: Lt. Ronald Reagan, reserve cavalry officer, called to active duty. U-boats shell refinery on US-held Curacao in Caribbean. Japanese secure Cebu in Philippines.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 18, 1942: Doolittle Raid: 16 B-25s launched from USS Hornet bomb Tokyo, led by Lt. Col. James Doolittle; little damage inflicted, but significantly increases morale in US and decreases morale in Japan. US establishes War Manpower Commission to maximize effective use of workers.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 17, 1942: French Gen. Henri Giraud escapes from Königstein Castle, Dresden, Germany to Switzerland. RAF makes daylight raid to Augsburg; 7 of 12 Lancaster bombers shot down.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 16, 1942: Japanese land on Panay and Negros in Philippines.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 15, 1942: Eighth Air Force Bomber Command sets up headquarters at High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. French resistance attacks German headquarters at Arras.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 14, 1942: British destroy Yenangyaung oil fields in Burma as Japanese advance.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 13, 1942: Royce Raid: Brig. Gen. Ralph Royce leads 3 B-17s and 10 B-25s to Philippines, bombs, then evacuates 44 officers and civilians.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 12, 1942: Pandit Nehru, head of Indian Congress Party, pledges to cooperate with Allies. On Cebu US Gen. Chynoweth retreats to mountains to organize resistance.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 11, 1942: Germans contain Soviet landings at Eupatolia in Crimea. US authorizes Distinguished Service Medal for Merchant Marines.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 10, 1942: Bataan Death March begins: 75,000 US & Filipino troops forced on 55-mile march to Camp O’Donnell; 10,000 die. James Landis made official director of Office of Civilian Defense. Candy and cigarettes rationed in Holland.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 9, 1942: US surrenders to Japanese at Bataan: 35,000 troops, the largest surrender in US history. British carrier HMS Hermes and Australian destroyer HMAS Vampire sunk off Ceylon by Japanese aircraft.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 8, 1942: In Philippines, Gen. Jonathan Wainwright escapes from Bataan to Corregidor with 2000 US troops. US 10th Air Force flies first supply mission over “The Hump” from India into China.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 7, 1942: US Navy announces blacks can enlist for general service (Seabees, shore duty, stevedores), not just in mess as of 6/1/42, allowing time to build segregated facilities. Representatives from 11 western states meet with War Relocation Authority to protest Japanese-Americans evacuating to their states; Colorado alone agrees to accept voluntary relocation of enemy aliens.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 6, 1942: Japanese air raid on Vizagapatam and Cocanada, India tips India into Allied camp. Germany cuts rations of bread, meat, fats.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Our Capstone


Sirena Gate, Paestum, Italy
I used to love watching my oldest son play with blocks when he was little. A natural engineer, he was always drawn to building higher, longer, and sturdier, constantly modifying his designs. At children’s museums, he would enlist his younger sister and brother into helping him construct the giant arch from foam blocks. Not an easy job. The entire structure was completely unstable until the capstone block was inserted at the top, linking the two columns.

With the capstone, the arch is one of the most stable structures known to man, capable of bearing extreme amounts of weight over long periods of time. Without it? A heap of rubble.

Jesus called Himself the capstone, “the stone the builders rejected” (Matthew 21:42). Jesus Christ is the central, vital component to God’s plan of salvation, capable of bearing the weight of sin for all humanity for all time. Without Him? A heap of sin and pain. “Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12).

This Holy Week, ponder the magnitude of who Jesus is and what He did for us through His death and resurrection. What does He mean to you?

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 5, 1942: Japanese take Mt. Samat on Bataan.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 4, 1942: Japanese bombing of Mandalay, Burma hits trainload of bombs, 2000 killed. War Production Board takes control of US supply and distribution of quinine, necessary for prevention and treatment of malaria.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 3, 1942: Japanese begin final push for Bataan Peninsula.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 2, 1942: In Burma, Japanese take Prome and Akyab, securing Arakan Peninsula. In US, tin tubes for toothpaste & shaving cream must be turned in to buy new tube; restrictions placed on usage of tin in consumer packaging.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Today in World War II History

70 Years Ago—Apr. 1, 1942: Japanese land in Dutch New Guinea at Hollandia and Sorong. Study shows Demerol effective as synthetic, non-habit-forming morphine substitute (later shown to be habit-forming).