![]() Becker is nothing short of brilliant in capturing aural confusion in a print medium. Readers are tossed into the deep end of the pool, immediately drawn into Nao’s exhausting navigation of transactional dialogues with strangers, inscrutable signage, and the heavily accented English of her housemates and Haseda teachers- armed only with vague memory of her mother’s speech and translation apps on her phone. ![]() Having felt perpetually marginalized in America, Nao feels equally marginalized in Japan, struggling now with a language she once abandoned and questioning whether she even has a right to fully claim her Japanese heritage. ![]() While attending Haseda Japanese Language Institute, she lives in a shared residence with other Asian born housemates, who are similarly using Himawari House as home base to put distance between themselves and personal and family pressures. ![]() Nao, born in Japan but raised from early childhood in the United States, spends her gap year in Japan trying to reclaim the culture she pushed behind her in order to fit in with her American friends. Becker’s webcomic, Himawari Share, comes to print in an immersive graphic novel that explores cross-cultural identity and the power of language to separate and to unite. ![]()
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