In both of the novels they tell stories of women’s lives and how they survive. But they describes them differently. In The Buddha in the Attic, Otsuka uses a very different style. She tells the story in a “we” plural narrative. She never focuses on a single woman. She doesn't give them names. They are like many of us see them--an immigrant group, different from one another. Yet, at the same time, she tells their individual stories in America and then their common fate as the country rounds them up and sends them to internment camps during the war. However in the novel you know when the men are gone Fallon tells individuals stories of soldiers returning to civilian life
In both of the novels they tell stories of women’s lives and how they survive. But they describes them differently. In The Buddha in the Attic, Otsuka uses a very different style. She tells the story in a “we” plural narrative. She never focuses on a single woman. She doesn't give them names. They are like many of us see them--an immigrant group, different from one another. Yet, at the same time, she tells their individual stories in America and then their common fate as the country rounds them up and sends them to internment camps during the war. However in the novel you know when the men are gone Fallon tells individuals stories of soldiers returning to civilian life