1st Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest
As part of Little Tokyo Historical Society’s 130th Anniversary of Little Tokyo (1884-2014) celebratory activities throughout the year, Little Tokyo Historical Society held a fictional short story contest that awarded cash prizes to the top three. The fictional story had to depict the current, past, or future of Little Tokyo as part of the City of Los Angeles, California.
Winners
- First Place: “Doka B-100” by Ernest Nagamatsu.
- Second Place: “Carlos & Yuriko” by Rubén Guevara.
- Third Place: “Mr. K” by Satsuki Yamashita.
Some of the other Finalists:
- “Smiles Sonata” by Jeridel Banks
- “The Guardians” by Dimitri Ragano
- “A Little Piece of Home” by Kiyoshi Parker
- “A Wedding in Little Tokyo” by Avril Adams
- “Nihonmachi Serenade” by Chester Sakamoto
*Read stories from other Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contests:
2nd Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
3rd Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
4th Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
5th Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
6th Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
7th Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
8th Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
9th Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
10th Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
11th Annual Imagine Little Tokyo Short Story Contest >>
Stories from this series
Nihonmachi Serenade
Jan. 12, 2015 • Chester Sakamoto
Prologue: September 14, 1992 I am often drawn back to places that hold a sentimental value for me. That being said, I had not been to Little Tokyo in years, but when I read in the paper that a new museum was opening to honor the legacy of Japanese Americans, I made it a point to pay it a visit. The Japanese American National Museum was housed in the Hompa Hongwanji Buddhist Temple building on First Street and Central Avenue. …
A Wedding in Little Tokyo
Dec. 29, 2014 • Avril Adams
It was Saturday evening. Mitsue Yamashita’s fingers moved nimbly over a pair of kimono panels. She threaded a needle through the autumn design, stitching the panels together which were the last to be assembled for the kimono she intended to wear for the Little Tokyo Nisei Week festivities. It was the fifth year of the worst economic downturn anyone could remember and everyone feared the festival would fail to attract people outside the Issei and Nisei community. Mitsue and her …
A Little Piece of Home
Dec. 15, 2014 • Kiyoshi Parker
My second cousin had been here for a week already and she still hadn’t quite gotten used to the way of life here. Her name was Motoko and she was visiting from Tokyo, Japan. It was her first time abroad, and, of all places, Los Angeles would be her first exposure to anything foreign. I’ve spent all fifteen and a half years of my life here and even I still hadn’t gotten used to it. It hadn’t helped that my …
The Guardians
Dec. 1, 2014 • Dmitri Ragano
The temple stood at the edge of Little Tokyo, its delicate roof and garden just beyond the harsh shadows of the surrounding urban landscape. Across the street was a warehouse with graffiti and iron bars on the windows. Beyond that, the gutters were littered with needles and glass pipes, the sidewalks teeming with lost souls searching for a home, searching for peace. For generations, the denizens of Little Tokyo had labored to preserve the ways of their native land in …
Smile’s Sonata
Nov. 17, 2014 • Jeridel Banks
“Can you loan me this book?” A lanky man in a pair of black slacks and a white button-down shirt held a book in his hands. He was very tall, enough for me to tilt my head to look at his face. His skin was smooth and youthful, and his cheekbones rose high on his face, giving him a feminine nature. The jawline snapped to a strong point, defying the womanly features that accompanied his shapely nose and fair complexion. …
Mr. K
Nov. 3, 2014 • Satsuki Yamashita
I don’t know what drove me to perversely show up at the Nippon Ichi-ban Ramen house on our designated day and time as if we were still together. We’d shared the same table for lunch every Wednesday for three years. I was proving her point about my rigidity and boringness, which were the reasons she cited for dumping me. I chose to ignore the real reason; the pretty-boy, new trial attorney on the Sugarman case. No matter how many ways …
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