Internment

The Wolves of Vukasin Island
The Wolves of Vukasin Island
Handsome, moody, and reclusive, billionaire Alpha werewolf Dane Wiltshire is confined to Vukasin, a secluded but pleasant internment island for werewolves where humans are allowed to visit for only three weeks a month (the fourth week is that of the full moon, when werewolves run rampant and no human is safe). The proud Dane meets his match during a chance encounter with the stubborn and willful middle-class human, Adara Huntington. She’s attracted to his handsome looks but put off by his Alpha arrogance. Nevertheless, she embarks on a love affair with him. But it ends when he breaks the heart of her sweet and beloved sister, Fawna, by dissuading his best friend Edin from marrying her, suggesting the sisters are social-climbing gold diggers. Things worsen when one of the island’s enforcement officers, the boyfriend of Adara’s other sister Emmalina, tells Adara how Dane stole the woman of his dreams, later causing her death. All of this is enough to make Adara despise Dane and avoid him at every opportunity. And yet she cannot overcome her attraction to his powerful Alpha personality and stunning good looks. Just as Adara and her sisters must leave the island for the week of the full moon, a dangerous turn of events gives Dane the chance to redeem himself in Adara’s eyes . . . but will he succeed?
10
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36 Chapters
Pursuing My Ex-Wife Isn't Easy
Pursuing My Ex-Wife Isn't Easy
Six years ago, she was framed by her wicked sister and was abandoned by her then husband while she was pregnant.Six years later, she started anew with a different identity. Oddly, the same man who abandoned her in the past had not stopped pestering her at her front door.“Miss Gibson, what’s your relationship with Mister Lynch?”She smiled and answered nonchalantly, “I don’t know him.”“But sources say that you were once married.”She answered as she tucked her hair, “Those are rumors. I’m not blind, you see.”That day, she was pinned on the wall the moment she stepped in her door.Her three babies cheered, “Daddy said mommy’s eyes are bad! Daddy says he’ll fix it for mommy!”She wailed, “Please let me go, darling!”
8.1
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3094 Chapters
The Alpha's Surprised Mate (Book #1 of Silver Moon Series)
The Alpha's Surprised Mate (Book #1 of Silver Moon Series)
Alpha Devon had finally found his mate. There was only one problem (not really) she was human (or so he thought). Mykayla along with her younger sister Breaynia and their cousin Danique had recently moved to Washington State. They had no idea that they had moved into the Sylvyr Moon Packs territory. Sylvyr Moon, being the sole pack in the state, is one of the strongest and most powerful in the Pacific Northwest. Alpha Devon but now he has to find an easy way to explain the supernatural world to her. However, Mykayla is already well versed in the supernatural world. She along with her sister grew up alongside a pack in New Mexico. While exploring their new neighborhood Mykayla feels like she is being watched. Across the street stands Devon watching her. Their eyes meet but when Mykayla looks back up, he is gone (or so she thought). Unbeknown to them Mykayla is hired at Alpha Devon’s company as his PA. While Mykayla tries to fight her developing feelings for her boss Devonn is trying to make the bond stronger between them. One night Devonn’s beta, Kaleb, comes running into the room while he is speaking with his parents letting them know that Mykayla’s apartment building is on fire. That triggers a whole chain of events that no one saw coming. A manilla envelop is left attached to main gate of the territory Alpha Devon knows this is deeper than just some other asshole Alpha that has his sights set on his mate. The pack needs help! Alpha Devon’s cousin Naetaya tells him that she has some friends that can help. No one could prepare for who or what her friends were.
9.5
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183 Chapters
Bestfriends Shouldn't Know How You Taste
Bestfriends Shouldn't Know How You Taste
Ashley Grey knows better than to get involved with her bestfriend that's in a relationship. She has been keeping her feelings for him a secret for years. Until one day they are dared to kiss each other. Then everything is flipped between them. Stolen kisses, touches and a whole lot of tension. These two go on a journey that will either drift them apart or pull them even closer. “ I can’t be your friend Ley when I know how you taste.” This book is part of a series: Book 1: Badboy Asher Book 2: His Blonde Temptress Book 3: Loving The Enemy Book 4: Bestfriends Shouldn't Know How You Taste
9.8
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232 Chapters
Alpha Dante
Alpha Dante
"I want the entire show" he said, looking her in the eye. "I beg your pardon?" She asked, frowning in confusion, straightening on her chair. "I want the entire fucking show, get your information from me, talk to me, seduce me, sleep with me if you have to. I want to see how you work" he said, crossing his arms over his chest "only then would I decide whether or not to keep you in the job" *********************** When Aurora is assigned to work for her Don and Alpha's son, complications happen. The new Capo Dei Capi, Alpha Dante puts her up for a challenge. She is to impress HIM and get the information that she and his father were looking for.
9.5
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132 Chapters
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Nerdy To Badass Werewolf
Nerdy To Badass Werewolf
Book 1, 2 and 3 of Rejection Series. This book contains all three books combined;Skylar Maine was always bullied in her school for being a nerd. But she dealt with it. Always keeping her head down. Never fighting back. Now that her brothers are the new Betas they must all leave and visit the Ancient Wolves. Skylar couldn't be happier. After her Alpha Mate rejected her, she wanted nothing more than to leave. Heck, she didn't even want a mate from the start. Knowing the outcome already. But when she returns, will she be the same? Will she let people walk all over her again? Side note, this book is composed of all three of the Rejected Series books. Hope you enjoy!
9.3
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95 Chapters

How Does Obasan Depict Japanese Canadian Internment?

3 Answers2025-11-25 18:04:29

Reading 'Obasan' was like stepping into a shadowed corner of history I hadn't fully grasped before. Joy Kogawa's novel doesn't just recount the Japanese Canadian internment—it immerses you in the visceral loneliness and quiet resilience of those years through Naomi's childhood eyes. The way she layers fragmented memories—a mother's disappearance, the dust of abandoned homes, the oppressive silence of Uncle's farm—makes the injustice feel intimate rather than distant. What haunted me most was the contrast between Aunt Emily's fiery activism and Obasan's stoic endurance, showing how trauma fractures families into different coping mechanisms. The book's poetic, almost dreamlike prose somehow makes the bureaucratic cruelty (like the government selling confiscated fishing boats) hit harder because it feels personal, not just historical.

What sticks with me months later are the small details: the way Naomi describes the taste of powdered milk at the internment camp, or the weight of the ID tags around her neck. Kogawa doesn't need graphic violence to convey oppression—she shows it through a child's confusion at having her doll taken away, or the way adults suddenly stop speaking Japanese. It's one of those rare books that makes you ache for fictional characters while realizing their pain was very real for thousands.

How Does 'They Called Us Enemy' Depict Japanese Internment Camps?

4 Answers2025-06-27 17:19:53

'They Called Us Enemy' offers a raw, personal lens into the Japanese internment camps through George Takei's childhood memories. The graphic novel doesn't shy from the dehumanizing details—armed guards, cramped barracks, and the constant hum of humiliation. Families lived in horse stalls reeking of manure, their dignity stripped like the barbed wire fencing them in. Yet it also captures resilience: makeshift schools, baseball games in dust storms, and parents shielding kids from despair.

The artwork amplifies the emotional weight. Stark contrasts of light and shadow mirror the turmoil inside the camps, while subtle shifts in panel sizes evoke claustrophobia or fleeting moments of hope. Takei's youthful confusion ('Why are we the enemy?') pierces deeper than any textbook account. The book exposes systemic racism—how fear warped democracy—but also tiny acts of defiance, like a father secretly building a radio to hear news from outside. It’s history made visceral, blending innocence and injustice in a way that lingers long after the last page.

How Does Snow Falling On Cedars Novel Address The Internment Of Japanese Americans?

5 Answers2025-04-26 16:07:50

In 'Snow Falling on Cedars', the internment of Japanese Americans is woven into the story through the character of Kabuo Miyamoto, a Japanese American fisherman accused of murder. The novel doesn’t just focus on the trial but delves into the past, showing how Kabuo and his family were forced into internment camps during World War II. The author, David Guterson, paints a vivid picture of the injustice and humiliation they faced—losing their land, their dignity, and their sense of belonging.

Through flashbacks, we see how the internment shattered lives and relationships. Kabuo’s family loses their strawberry farm, which they had worked so hard to build, to a white neighbor who takes advantage of their desperation. The novel also explores the broader impact on the community, showing how fear and prejudice led to the betrayal of neighbors and friends. It’s not just a historical backdrop but a central theme that shapes the characters’ lives and the trial’s outcome.

What struck me most was how the internment’s legacy lingers, even years later. Kabuo’s stoic demeanor and the mistrust he faces in the trial are direct results of that trauma. The novel doesn’t offer easy answers but forces readers to confront the lasting scars of racism and injustice. It’s a powerful reminder of how history shapes the present, and how silence and complicity can perpetuate harm.

How Did British Internment Differ From U.S. Internment?

4 Answers2025-10-17 07:41:46

If you set British internment next to U.S. internment, the most obvious difference is who got swept up and why. In Britain early in the war there was a frantic, catch-all policy toward 'enemy aliens'—that meant Germans, Austrians, Italians, and yes, many Jewish refugees who had fled Nazism. The government set up tribunals that sorted people into categories and sent thousands to the Isle of Man and even onto ships bound for Canada and Australia. It felt chaotic and, to me, heartbreakingly bureaucratic: people who had escaped persecution found themselves behind barbed wire because of passports and suspicion.

In contrast, the U.S. policy after Executive Order 9066 targeted a specific ethnic group—Japanese Americans—many of whom were citizens. The American program was geographically-driven (evacuation zones on the West Coast) and resulted in mass forced removal, property loss, and long-term trauma for entire communities. Britain relied more on tribunals and periodic releases, and the internees often included a larger share of recent immigrants rather than large numbers of long-established citizens. Reading both stories side by side, I keep thinking about how legal labels and public panic can redefine who counts as 'protected' and who becomes disposable—it's both infuriating and deeply sad.

Where Can I Find Internment Camp Records Online?

7 Answers2025-10-22 16:12:35

Got a name and a date? Great — I’ll walk you through where I usually start when hunting for internment camp records online.

Begin at national archives: in the U.S. that means the National Archives (NARA), which has digitized many wartime files, rosters, and War Relocation Authority records. Free sites like FamilySearch and state archive portals can also turn up transport lists, draft or military files, and naturalization papers that connect people to camps. For subscription sites, Ancestry and Fold3 are gold mines — Fold3 is especially useful for military and government-issued cards. If you’re researching Holocaust-era confinement, check the Arolsen Archives (International Tracing Service), Yad Vashem, and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum for deportation lists, prisoner cards, and survivor testimony.

Don’t overlook specialized projects: Densho focuses on Japanese-American incarceration with oral histories and searchable databases, and many individual camp museums or national parks (think 'Manzanar National Historic Site') host digitized registries and photos. The International Committee of the Red Cross has tracing services and POW records for wartime internments, while local libraries and newspaper archives can supply arrest notices, shipping manifests, and community lists.

A few practical tips: gather every identifier you can (aliases, birthdates, places), try variant spellings, search for camp names as well as town names, and contact archivists when you hit a wall — they often suggest collections that aren’t fully digitized. Fees and access rules vary: some scans are free, others require requests or subscriptions. I love the detective work here; finding a small index card or a photo can feel like pulling a person back into the light.

What Legal Challenges Followed Internment Policies?

7 Answers2025-10-22 20:23:18

I've always been struck by how messy the legal fallout from wartime internment was — and how long it took to untangle the constitutional knots. Back in World War II the government used military necessity to justify mass exclusion and detention of Japanese Americans, which produced landmark rulings like Hirabayashi and Korematsu that broadly upheld curfews and exclusion orders. But those decisions sat uneasily with Ex parte Endo, where the Court said a loyal citizen couldn't be kept in detention, and the tension created a legal tug-of-war that lasted for decades.

After the war, survivors and civil liberties advocates pushed back through petitions, habeas corpus petitions, and ultimately coram nobis cases in the 1980s that exposed suppressed evidence and led to the vacating of some wartime convictions. The Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians produced a report that helped build political momentum for the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, which officially apologized and provided reparations. Watching how constitutional doctrines like due process and equal protection were tested, then reinterpreted, taught me a lot about how fragile legal protections can be under fear — and how persistent activism can repair some of that damage. I still get chills seeing how law and politics collided, and how ordinary people eventually forced an official reckoning.

Does Before Internment: Essays In Prewar Japanese American History Cover The Pearl Harbor Attack?

4 Answers2026-02-21 17:02:06

I picked up 'Before Internment: Essays in Prewar Japanese American History' expecting a deep dive into the cultural and political tensions leading up to WWII, but it doesn't focus much on Pearl Harbor itself. The essays are more about the daily lives, struggles, and identities of Japanese Americans before the war shifted everything. It's fascinating how it captures their communities' vibrancy—like the way immigrant farmers adapted to American agriculture or how young Nisei navigated dual identities.

That said, if you're looking for military analysis or blow-by-blow accounts of December 7th, this isn't the book. It subtly hints at the rising prejudices that made internment possible, though. The closest it gets to Pearl Harbor is discussing how prewar anti-Japanese sentiment in the U.S. created a powder keg. Still, a must-read for context on what was lost.

How Does 'Baseball Saved Us' Portray Japanese Internment Camps?

4 Answers2025-06-18 20:10:17

'Baseball Saved Us' dives deep into the bleak reality of Japanese internment camps during WWII, but it's the resilience of the human spirit that steals the show. The story follows a young boy and his family, stripped of their freedom and forced into cramped, dusty barracks. The camp is a prison—guarded towers, barbed wire, and the constant humiliation of being treated as enemies in their own country. Yet, baseball becomes their rebellion. The makeshift field, carved out of desert dirt, becomes a sanctuary. Every swing of the bat is defiance against the dehumanization. The book doesn’t shy away from the harshness—the scorching heat, the racism, the despair. But it also captures fleeting moments of joy and solidarity. The game unites the internees, giving them purpose and a sliver of dignity. It’s a poignant reminder that even in the darkest times, small acts of resistance can shine.

The illustrations amplify the emotional weight, contrasting the barren camp with the vibrant energy of the players. The book’s strength lies in its balance: it educates without lecturing, and it mourns without losing hope. It’s a tribute to the unbreakable will of those who turned a symbol of America—baseball—into their own weapon of survival.

How Does 'We Are Not Free' Portray Japanese Internment?

3 Answers2025-06-28 10:08:17

The novel 'We Are Not Free' dives headfirst into the raw, unfiltered reality of Japanese internment during WWII. Through the eyes of a tight-knit group of teens, we see how their lives get ripped apart overnight—forced into cramped barracks, surrounded by barbed wire, treated like criminals just for their heritage. The author doesn’t sugarcoat the humiliation or the anger, especially when characters get drafted to fight for the same country that locked them up. What hits hardest is the way friendships fracture under pressure—some kids cling to their Japanese roots, others desperately try to prove they’re 'American enough.' The book’s strength is its messy, emotional honesty; it shows internment as both a collective trauma and a deeply personal nightmare.

Where Can I Read Before Internment: Essays In Prewar Japanese American History For Free?

3 Answers2026-01-06 23:20:38

I totally get the hunt for free reads—especially niche historical stuff like 'Before Internment.' Libraries are your best friend here! Many university libraries offer free digital access to academic texts, and some public libraries partner with services like OverDrive or Hoopla. I found a ton of obscure essays through my local library’s interloan system. Also, check JSTOR or Project MUSE; they often have free previews or limited-access articles. If you’re a student, your institution might have subscriptions.

Another angle: Archive.org sometimes hosts older scholarly works under 'borrow' systems. It’s not always instant, but I’ve snagged gems there. Just remember, supporting authors when you can is cool—but until then, happy digging!

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