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Summary Of Panic Grass And Feverfew

202 Words1 Pages
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
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