Tallgrass by, Sandra Dallas narrated by, Lorelei King
This would make a really good book club book. It’s a fascinating
look at the Internment camps, actually more of a look on the people in the towns
and how they felt about it; it was nice to find out that some didn't want the
camps and that these people should be released because they were American citizens.
It’s a sad chapter in the US History but something that we need to look at so
it doesn’t happen again especially in this day and age.
I enjoyed the characters in this book especially Rennie and
her family, she was lucky to have great parents who objected to the camps, even
when their own son was off at war. This book is also a bit of a coming of age
story for Rennie. There is also a mystery added in and I’m sure you can guess
who is blamed for the crime.
This was my first book by this author but it won’t be my
last I really enjoyed her writing style and thought she was a very good
storyteller. I also enjoyed the interview at the end of the book with the
authors reasons for having the story told from the townies prospective and not
the Japanese in the camps, which I felt made this a unique read because we are
on the outside looking in just like the real people in the towns that were near
any of these camps. The confusion of should you hate these people, then the
realization that these are American citizens, and the backlash from other
community members if you try to stick up for the people in the camps or say
anything about releasing them. That’s what I find the most fascinating about
this period in our history, is the how would you feel question, I’d like to
think I would feel as Rennie’s father did but you just never know.
Lorelei King’s narration was as always spot on, everyone had
their own voice and it was easy to differentiate between all the characters.
4 ½ Stars