ASH CHILDREN is a literary historical novel about survival, memory, and the long shadow of Hiroshima.
In the aftermath of the atomic bombing, a young boy named Koji Sato survives where his family does not. As the world rebuilds around him, Koji carries something heavier than ash: the burden of remembering names that history prefers to forget.
Decades later, when long-buried documents resurface, Koji is forced to confront not only the men who decided the fate of his city, but the cost of breaking silence in a world built on distance and justification.
This is not a story about the blast itself, but about what comes after-the years, the inheritance of trauma, and the quiet courage it takes to insist that memory matters.
Written with restraint and moral clarity, ASH CHILDREN explores the human cost of history, the weight of survival, and the responsibility that follows those who live on.