This is another map of the Japanese Internment Camps. The shaded area is where they took the Japanese-Americans from.
There were 10 camps: Amache in Colorado, Rohwer and Jerome in Arkansas, Topaz in Utah, Minidoka in Idaho, Heart Mountain in Wyoming, Poston and Gila River in Arizona, and Tule Lake and Manzanar in California. These are shown up on the the map above. People came into the camps from the West Coast (as shown left). No one came from Hawaii because Hawaii hadn't been made a state then; it was made a state in 1959. The camps were in remote areas, usually in deserts in the West.
The life at the camps were both good and bad in different ways. They got a good amount of food, but it wasn't that high-quality. Most people got to stay with their families, but some families were separated. Adults worked and kids went to school. Some tried to farm, but the soil and the climate made it hard for farming and for living there. There was inadequate medical fare and most people lived in packed barracks. It was also a difficult journey if you wanted to escape the camps alive; armed soldiers watched around for anyone who tried to escape.