Water Thicker Than Blood
World of Books
The feel-good place to buy books

Water Thicker Than Blood by George Uba
“I thought my life began in Chicago. I was mistaken. That is where my body first made its appearance, but the contours of my life…had their start much sooner.” In Water Thicker Than Blood, poet and professor George Uba traces his life as a Japanese American born in the late 1940s, a period of insidious anti-Japanese racism. His beautiful, impressionist memoir chronicles how he, like many Sansei (and Nisei) across the United States, grappled with dislocation and trauma while seeking acceptance and belonging. Uba’s personal account of his efforts to achieve normality and assuage guilt unfolds as racial demographics in America are shifting. He struggled with inherently violent midcentury educational and childrearing practices and a family health crisis, along with bullying. Uba describes boy scouts and yogore (community rebels and castoffs) with vivid detail, using these vignettes to show how margins were blurred and how both sets of youth experienced injury through the same ideological pressures. Water Thicker Than Blood is not a conventional story about recovery or family reconciliation. But itoffers an intimate look at the lasting—in some ways irreversible—damage caused by post-internment ideologies of “being accepted” and “fitting in inconspicuously.” It speaks volumes for the greater Sansei post-internment experience.
"George Uba’s memoir Water Thicker Than Blood reflects upon the personal and cultural intricacies of Japanese American life, before and after World War II…Uba came of age at the onset of a time of social upheaval, challenging conformity and cohesive immigrant identities…. With resonant finesse, Water Thicker Than Blood is a memoir about a family, a community, and the individuality of experiences."—Foreword Review
“Through George Uba’s deft storytelling, I relived our growing years from a boy’s point of view—the bittersweet details, the smallest hurts, and collective grievances. Our Sansei generation was raised with repurposed cultural messages and within repressed histories. You might say it couldn’t be helped; the teachings Nisei passed on to us could be nuanced and cruel, gifted with love and hope but also conditions, a complex blessing. I warmly recommend this book, unflinching and honest, which tells our story, the way we were, growing up on the L.A. Westside.”—Karen Tei Yamashita, Professor Emerita of Literature and Creative Writing at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and author of I-Hotel and Letters to Memory
“George Uba has written a trenchant story about his tragic and heroic parents, and by extension, thousands of the tragic and heroic parents who came out of the camps. There are many tense and uncomfortable moments in Water Thicker Than Blood, but much of the tension and discomfort is released in a beautiful section that had me in tears—where he suddenly gets his mother. This is a lovely addition to the rich literature somehow created out of a moment in history where an entire generation of Japanese Americans had every dream they’d ever had taken from them, all at once."—Cynthia Kadohata, Newbery Medal– and National Book Award–winning author of Kira-Kira and The Thing about Luck
“Water Thicker Than Blood is the most compelling chronicle since Obasan of one of the darkest chapters in North American history. Joining art, memoir, and social history, Uba illumines the experiences of generations of Japanese in America by focusing on one fractured family, while steadily linking that saga to the unseen and incalculable postwar injuries caused by incarceration and ideologies of acceptance. Most haunting is the author’s own psychological journey, interspersing unblinking descriptions of personal indignities and social affronts with reflective lyrical vignettes. A breathtaking book."—King-Kok Cheung, Professor of English and Asian American Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles
"As a scholar of Asian American studies, [Uba’s] delving is both personal and academically informed. Yet his historical excavations, in being presented as a memoir, make it also useful for classrooms in history, literary studies, and creative writing…. Uba's memoir makes a powerful, personal case for the lasting effects of internment even on subsequent generations."—American Literary History
“Through George Uba’s deft storytelling, I relived our growing years from a boy’s point of view—the bittersweet details, the smallest hurts, and collective grievances. Our Sansei generation was raised with repurposed cultural messages and within repressed histories. You might say it couldn’t be helped; the teachings Nisei passed on to us could be nuanced and cruel, gifted with love and hope but also conditions, a complex blessing. I warmly recommend this book, unflinching and honest, which tells our story, the way we were, growing up on the L.A. Westside.”—Karen Tei Yamashita, Professor Emerita of Literature and Creative Writing at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and author of I-Hotel and Letters to Memory
“George Uba has written a trenchant story about his tragic and heroic parents, and by extension, thousands of the tragic and heroic parents who came out of the camps. There are many tense and uncomfortable moments in Water Thicker Than Blood, but much of the tension and discomfort is released in a beautiful section that had me in tears—where he suddenly gets his mother. This is a lovely addition to the rich literature somehow created out of a moment in history where an entire generation of Japanese Americans had every dream they’d ever had taken from them, all at once."—Cynthia Kadohata, Newbery Medal– and National Book Award–winning author of Kira-Kira and The Thing about Luck
“Water Thicker Than Blood is the most compelling chronicle since Obasan of one of the darkest chapters in North American history. Joining art, memoir, and social history, Uba illumines the experiences of generations of Japanese in America by focusing on one fractured family, while steadily linking that saga to the unseen and incalculable postwar injuries caused by incarceration and ideologies of acceptance. Most haunting is the author’s own psychological journey, interspersing unblinking descriptions of personal indignities and social affronts with reflective lyrical vignettes. A breathtaking book."—King-Kok Cheung, Professor of English and Asian American Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles
"As a scholar of Asian American studies, [Uba’s] delving is both personal and academically informed. Yet his historical excavations, in being presented as a memoir, make it also useful for classrooms in history, literary studies, and creative writing…. Uba's memoir makes a powerful, personal case for the lasting effects of internment even on subsequent generations."—American Literary History
George Uba is an Emeritus Professor of English at California State University, Northridge, where he served as Chair of the Department of English and was a founding faculty member and Acting Chair of the Department of Asian American Studies. He is the author of Disorient Ballroom, a volume of poetry.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9781439922583 |
| ISBN 10 | 1439922586 |
| Title | Water Thicker Than Blood |
| Author | George Uba |
| Series | Asian American History And Cultu |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Paperback |
| Publisher | Temple University Press,U.S. |
| Year published | 2022-06-03 |
| Number of pages | 208 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |