Fertile Ground brings to light a little-known facet of 20th century American history. The internment of Japanese Americans on the west coast during WW II is common knowledge, but what is less known is that the same law, specifically the Alien Enemy Act, was also used to register and, in some cases, indefinitely intern thousands of Germans and Italians during the war. My novel depicts one German family\u27s struggle with this government policy. The text touches on issues similar to those explored in Joy Kagowa\u27s Obasan: suspension of civil liberties, economic restrictions, and the fracturing of families. The novel also responds to Kagowa\u27s novel by asking a simple question: What if the Other suddenly becomes the Self? The physical...