Writer, Photographer, Eater

Clips

Samples of my published reporting and essays.

San Jose's Japantown Stayed the Same for More Than 70 Years. Now, Change is Coming

n Jackson Street in San Jose, the one- and two-story wooden buildings—with their mid-century neon signs and lunch specials in the windows—haven’t changed much since Evelyn Hori first visited the neighborhood 30 years ago. A group of fellow Japanese Americans brought the homesick UC Santa Cruz student to Gombei restaurant, where the flavors transported her to her mother’s kitchen in Los Angeles. 

Hori was so charmed by that first visit to San Jose’s Japantown that she took a job at the senior center after graduation. And she’s raised her own family in the community, too. Since the end of World War II, Jackson Street has been a home away from home for Japanese Americans—first as refuge from racism and, more recently, as a place to attend cultural events, pick up fresh manju or slurp a bowl of udon. Unlike its counterparts in San Francisco and Los Angeles, San Jose’s Japantown is often overlooked. It’s just three blocks of low-slung buildings, and, like San Jose itself, it's a place even other Bay Area residents don’t know much about.

Learn more about the community and changes that could threaten its traditions in my article for KQED.