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The Nail That Sticks Out
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26 November 2024

When the North American dream meets traditional Japanese conformity, two cultures collide.
Does the past define who we are, who we become?
In April 1942, Suzanne’s mother was an eight-month-old baby when her family was torn from their home in Victoria, British Columbia. Arriving at Vancouver’s Hastings Park, they bunked in horse stalls for months before being removed to an incarceration camp in the Slocan Valley. After the Second World War, forced resettlement scattered Japanese families across Canada, leading to high intermarriage rates and an erosion of ethnicity. Loss of heritage language impeded the sharing of stories, contributing to strained generational relationships and a conflict between Eastern and Western values.
This hybrid memoir and fourth-generation narrative of the Japanese Canadian experience celebrates family, places, and traditions. Steeped in history and cultural arts, it includes portraits of family and community members — people who, in rebuilding their lives, made lasting contributions to the Toronto landscape and triumphed over adversity.
With insight and integrity, Hartmann deftly weaves light and dark threads of personal experience, family lore, and Japanese Canadian history into a handcrafted kimono that captures the beautiful imperfections of life.
The Nail that Sticks Out is at once a touching portrait of the unique experience of Japanese Canadians while beautifully speaking to the larger narrative of intergenerational love and hardship that echoes through the experience of all immigrant communities.
The Nail That Sticks Out weaves together compelling community research and heartfelt family history to offer a glimpse into Japanese Canadian community amidst a legacy of uprooting, displacement, and in-betweenness. Navigating the uncertainty of both the past and the future, Hartmann's magnetic writing is a compass for those looking for markers of memory, resilience, and hope.
This most insightful memoir reveals our most human desire to belong to a community fractured and spread out by the traumatic events of the Second World War.
A warm, touching memoir, full of insights that reveals a part of Canadian society rarely talked about in literature and in general.
Honest and insightful, a testament to Japanese Canadian resilience.
Richly textured, illuminating, and poignant. As Hartmann re-assembles the shards of her family’s past and her coming of age, the joinery, like kintsugi, is transformational.
Suzanne Elki Yoko Hartmann is an editor and the author of the children’s book My Father’s Nose. Her writing reflects her roots as a fourth-generation Japanese Canadian with German ancestry and explores cultural memories, meaningful coincidences, community, and identity. She lives in Toronto.
Preface
1 Mukashi, Mukashi
2 The Kimono
3 Leaving Home
4 First to the Horse Stalls
5 The Church Buddhists Built
6 A Time to Remember
7 Heart and Soul
8 Odori Primer
9 Miss Tokyo
10 Natsu Matsuri
11 Orde Street Revisited
12 Rage
Acknowledgements
Notes
Bibliography
Image Credits
Additional Credits
About the Author