Available Formats
Hardback
Published: 5th September 2023
Paperback
Published: 6th August 2024
Hardback, Large Print Edition
Published: 3rd January 2024
Evergreen
By (Author) Naomi Hirahara
Soho Press
Soho Press
5th September 2023
1st August 2023
United States
General
Fiction
813.6
Hardback
312
Width 164mm, Height 236mm
A Japanese American nurse's aide navigates the dangers of post-WWII and post-Manzanar life as she attempts to find justice for a broken family in this follow-up to the Mary Higgins Clark Award-winning Clark and Division. Los Angeles, 1946- It's been two years since Aki Ito and her family were released from Manzanar detention center and resettled in Chicago with other Japanese Americans. Now the Itos have finally been allowed to return home to California-but nothing is as they left it. The entire Japanese American community is starting from scratch, with thousands of people living in dismal refugee camps while they struggle to find new houses and jobs in over-crowded Los Angeles. Aki is working as a nurse's aide at the Japanese Hospital in Boyle Heights when an elderly Issei man is admitted with suspicious injuries. When she seeks out his son, she is shocked to recognize her husband's best friend, Babe Watanabe. Could Babe be guilty of elder abuse Only a few days later, Little Tokyo is rocked by a murder at the low-income hotel where the Watanabes have been staying. When the cops start sniffing around Aki's home, she begins to worry that the violence tearing through her community might threaten her family. What secrets have the Watanabes been hiding, and can Aki protect her husband from getting tangled up in their mess
Praise for Evergreen
"I have long been a fan of Naomi Hiraharas writing, but Evergreen may be my favorite of her novels. The mystery is set against the backdrop of Japanese Americans returning to their homes in Los Angeles Little Tokyo after World War II as they try to rebuild their lives after either having been unfairly held in detention camps or fighting with the 'Go for Broke' battalion, with everyone dealing with different types of discrimination, fear, and trauma. The historical details are accurate, heartrending, and eye-opening."
Lisa See, New York Times bestselling author of The Island of Sea Women
Praise for Clark and Division
Winner of the Mary Higgins Clark Award
Winner of The Lefty Award for Best Historical Novel
A New York Times Best Mystery Novel of the Year
A ParadeMagazine 101 Best Mystery Books of All Time
A New York TimesBook Review Editors' Choice
A Washington Post Best Mystery and Thriller of the Year
Searing . . . This is as much a crime novel as it is a family and societal tragedy, filtering one of the cruelest examples of American prejudice through the prism of one young woman determined to assert her independence, whatever the cost.
The New York TimesBook Review
Naomi Hirahara was destined to write Clark and Division . . . The vibrant characters, the history and the aura of determined optimism that permeate the novel make it feel like the beginning of a saga not unlike Jacqueline Winspears Maisie Dobbs mysteries.
Los Angeles Times
A rich and vibrant portrayal of Nisei life.
Los Angeles Review of Books
Naomi Hirahara is the Mary Higgins Clark Award-winning author of Clark and Division, and the Edgar Award-winning author of the Mas Arai mystery series, including Summer of the Big Bachi, which was a Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year and one of the Chicago Tribune's Ten Best Mysteries and Thrillers; Gasa Gasa Girl; Snakeskin Shamisen; and Hiroshima Boy. She is also the author of the LA-based Ellie Rush mysteries. A former editor of The Rafu Shimpo newspaper, she has co-written non-fiction books like Life after Manzanar and the award-winning Terminal Island- Lost Communities of Los Angeles Harbor. The Stanford University alumna was born and raised in Altadena, CA; she now resides in the adjacent town of Pasadena, CA.