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Attu Boy: A Young Alaskan's WWII Memoir (Paperback)

Attu Boy: A Young Alaskan's WWII Memoir Cover Image
By Nick Golodoff, Rachel Mason (Editor), Brenda Maly (Preface by)
$24.95
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Description


In the quiet of morning, exactly six months after Pearl Harbor, the Japanese touched down on American soil. Landing on the remote Alaska island of Attu, they assailed an entire village, holding the Alaskan villagers for two months and eventually corralling all survivors into a freighter bound for Japan.
One of those survivors, Nick Golodoff, became a prisoner of war at just six years old. He was among the dozens of Unangan Attu residents swept away to Hokkaido, and one of only twenty-five to survive. Attu Boy tells Golodoff’s story of these harrowing years as he found both friendship and cruelty at the hands of the Japanese. It offers a rare look at the lives of civilian prisoners and their captors in WWII-era Japan. It also tells of Golodoff’s bittersweet return to a homeland torn apart by occupation and forced internments. Interwoven with other voices from Attu, this richly illustrated memoir is a testament to the struggles, triumphs, and heartbreak of lives disrupted by war.

About the Author


Except for his imprisonment in Japan, Nick Golodoff (1935–2013) lived his entire life in the Aleutian Islands.


Rachel Mason is emeritus professor of art education research at the University of Roehampton, UK.  

Praise For…


Attu Boy: A Young Alaskan’s WWII Memoir is the firsthand account of Nick Golodoff, a six-year-old Unangan boy who survived the invasion and three years as a Japanese prisoner of war in Otaru on Hokkaido Island.… Attu Boy is a fundamental text for any scholar of Alaska, Alaska Natives, WWII in the Pacific, and the field of Indigenous studies.
— Jessica Leslie Arnett

Product Details
ISBN: 9781602232495
ISBN-10: 1602232490
Publisher: University of Alaska Press
Publication Date: May 15th, 2015
Pages: 180
Language: English