Hardcover, 294 pages
Published Oct. 15, 2016 by Last Gasp.
Hardcover, 294 pages
Published Oct. 15, 2016 by Last Gasp.
Hiroshima City, Hiroshima, Japan. Spring 1945. Six-year-old Gen Nakaoka lives with his father—who is adamantly opposed to the war that is claiming the lives of so many of his fellow countrymen—his mother, his sister Eiko, and his younger brother Shinji; his two older brothers, Akira and Koji, have evacuated to the country and gone to work in the munitions factories, respectively. As Gen's father becomes increasingly outspoken against the war, he is labeled as a traitor to the Empire along with Gen and the rest of his family. All around them, friends and neighbors, teachers and classmates, turn against the Nakaoka family. The war effort has already made food scarce, but surviving in a poor household among few friends and hundreds of enemies proves to be an ordeal like none that the generally playful Gen has faced before. His life is being turned inside out, but neither Gen nor any …
Hiroshima City, Hiroshima, Japan. Spring 1945. Six-year-old Gen Nakaoka lives with his father—who is adamantly opposed to the war that is claiming the lives of so many of his fellow countrymen—his mother, his sister Eiko, and his younger brother Shinji; his two older brothers, Akira and Koji, have evacuated to the country and gone to work in the munitions factories, respectively. As Gen's father becomes increasingly outspoken against the war, he is labeled as a traitor to the Empire along with Gen and the rest of his family. All around them, friends and neighbors, teachers and classmates, turn against the Nakaoka family. The war effort has already made food scarce, but surviving in a poor household among few friends and hundreds of enemies proves to be an ordeal like none that the generally playful Gen has faced before. His life is being turned inside out, but neither Gen nor any of the people in Hiroshima could imagine the horror that the coming August will bring…
A now-classic manga, Hadashi no Gen (Barefoot Gen) is based on author Keiji Nakazawa’s own experiences as a young boy in Hiroshima at the end of World War II. Gen's tale is a deep, harrowing read about the effects of war on a civilian population and what it takes to survive in a world on fire. This edition uses a translation by Project Gen, a team of volunteers formed in the 1970s with the mission of providing a complete English translation of Hadashi no Gen so that a wider audience around the world could read its message.