Summary Of Panic Grass And Feverfew

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By the same token, Hersey 's personal political agenda still continues to be ambiguous in Chapter 4, Panic Grass And Feverfew. While Hersey adds a number of graphic accounts and stories, we should, again, note an oddity that is missing from his book: any kind of deliberate anti-American awareness in the wake of Hiroshima 's devastation. Mrs. Nakamura develops a resentful hatred of Americans when she supposes that they had released a poison on the city; but when this comment turns out to be baseless, her animosity immediately vanishes. Later, she explains to Hersey that the public mood of the Japanese was a sort of hopeless acceptance: “It was war and we had to expect it.” (89) Mr. Tanimoto wrote a letter to an American colleague with the