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Hiroshima No Pika

par Maruki Toshi

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19322140,489 (4.07)5
A retelling of a mother's account of what happened to her family during the Flash that destroyed Hiroshima in 1945.
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Have you seen Grave of the Fireflies? It's a cartoon movie with the same subject as this book. Both are horrifying and important. As the author of this books says, it's all about making people realize that atomic bombs should never be dropped again. ( )
  LibrarianDest | Jan 3, 2024 |
Apicture book about ""the Flash"" at Hiroshima would seem a dubious proposition. Japanese artist and antiwar activist Maruki manages to avoid the opposing perils of giving children nightmares and belittling the horror. The text, based on one woman's account with bits of other people's experiences mixed in, tells of a sunny day and a pleasant family breakfast interrupted by a sudden, terrible flash, followed by fire and chaos. The little girl Mil is knocked unconscious but recovers to run from the debris, fleeing the fire with her mother, who carries Mii's badly wounded father on her back. Crowds of people wander like ghosts, and fall. ""There were heaps of people everywhere."" A man and a cat float down the river, dead. A nursing mother wades into the river and out of sight, carrying her dead baby. Darkness, rain, two rivers, and four days later, Mil is still clutching her breakfast chopsticks. Returning to the city, the family finds ""a burned-out wasteland as far as the eye could see."" Mii's father seems to heal, but he dies within months. ""Mii never grew after that day. Many years have passed and she is still the same size she was when she was seven years old."" Thousands of people died, Maruki adds, and many are still in hospitals. ""There is no cure for their diseases."" On August 6, Mii floats a lantern for her father and another for a swallow who was also a casualty of the Flash. ""It can't happen again,"" she says, ""if no one drops the bomb."" Maruki's illustrations are fluent, expressive, gracefully distorted, a bit pretty for the occasion if judged for adults, but--with all the swirling backgrounds of cloudy fire and the heaped and floating masses of nude bodies--clearly depicting ""something very bad that happened,"" which Maruki describes for young people ""in the hope that their knowing will help keep it from happening again."" The publishers, playing it safe, age the book ""12 up,"" but it reads far more simply, looks like a typical picture book, and is altogether a gentler, and thus suitably younger introduction than Lifton's Return to Hiroshima (1970).

-Kirkus Review
  CDJLibrary | Jan 19, 2023 |
This book should still be published today. Maybe be giving new illustrations as modern libraries would not a low a naked woman’s nipple to be on the cover of a book in the children’s department. This is the true story of a little girl and her mother on the day of and days after the dropping of the bomb on Hiroshima. This story is bold, this story is powerful. This story is heartbreaking, and should still be in libraries, so children can learn not to repeat the mistakes of the past. ( )
  LibrarianRyan | Nov 9, 2021 |
This is a chilling gripping book about the atomic bomb that was dropped in Hiroshima. It follows the story of Mii and her mother and father who attempt to flee Hiroshima after the dropping of the atomic bomb. Mii's father is badly injured so Mii's mother carries him on her back as they run to avoid the fires that have been caused by the explosion. Along the way, you witness the horror that those in Hiroshima that day experienced. The pictures are somewhat graphic so caution should be used when presenting this book to children. Although it is written as a picture book, it is best suited for older children. ( )
  KristinaGr | Feb 9, 2020 |
This is a picture book that describes life from the point of view of a little girl after the atomic bomb was dropped on Japan. The book shows how peoples lives were affected from the bomb, and also carefully explains the death and devastation that was experienced. This is a great book to share with students who are learning about World War II. ( )
  Aelling1 | Jan 19, 2020 |
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A retelling of a mother's account of what happened to her family during the Flash that destroyed Hiroshima in 1945.

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