Hawaii Books
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Used price: $71.06

Terrific Hawaiian mystery Review Date: 2008-07-08
Exotic setting, intricate plotReview Date: 2008-03-10
Wonderful!!Review Date: 2007-09-08
Great Series!!Review Date: 2007-06-10
First book review, but there's no more deserving story!Review Date: 2007-05-09

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Hughes really gets it right!Review Date: 2007-05-26
Great Book!Review Date: 2005-10-22
Gripping story with surprising plot twistsReview Date: 2005-09-30
Entertaining and informative for Hawaii fansReview Date: 2005-05-16
Great Book - Great Character!!Review Date: 2006-06-01

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true storiesReview Date: 2008-01-30
people. and it was done so well I would recommend you read Malaki first
then this book after. good read
Wonderful, rare story. IlluminatingReview Date: 2007-05-18
Outstanding collaborative effort by two very important Native Hawaiian voices. This wonderful portrait details a man`s life spent well--dealing with the challenges and trials of surviving Hansen`s disease in Kalaupapa, Moloka`i. Not an in depth about Hansen`s or Kalaupapa, this is Henry`s story, his life, loves, talents and legacy. Henry tells his story, through Sally-Jo`s sensitive handling, with the self effacing, off hand manner of a true local Bruddah. Typical of Hawaiians of his generation, he can do a handful of difficult things really well. This celebration of a life lived with purpose also shows what can result from a life lived purposefully with Aloha. I strongly recommend this book.
Hope and courage in adversityReview Date: 2007-04-22
This is an amazing story. It is Henry's story. Henry Nalielua, diagnosed with Hansen's disease at the age of ten, was branded leprous. "No Footprints in the Sand" is an important memoir. It tells of the journey that took Henry from a sugar plantation community on the Island of Hawaii to Kalaupapa, a remote settlement on the Hawaiian island of Molokai.
Nalaielua's story is inspiring. Even in exile, with lifelong medical and physical challenges and isolation from his family, he faced life with hope, perseverance, courage, and humor. Henry learned to draw and paint. He became an artist. Henry loved music and mastered the ukulele and upright bass. He became a musician. Henry's mind was sharp. He was determined and quick-to-learn. He became an historian. Henry has also served on numerous public agency advisory boards. When the facility at Kalaupapa was named a National Historic Park, Henry became a guide for park visitors. He still resides at Kalaupapa
Co-author Sally-Jo Bowman worked determinedly over a period of years to help bring Henry's story to publication. She first met Henry in 1995, when he helped her with on-site research at Kaluapapa for several magazine articles about the Hansen's disease colony.
Henry's story is unforgettable. It is told with intimacy and openness. "No Footprints in the Sand" is a heartwarming memoir that will inspire anyone facing adversity, long term illness, or needing encouragement. This was a very positive reading experience.
Henry, a rascal, can-do kanaka (Hawaiian man)Review Date: 2007-01-19
It stirred emotions in the same way as Paulo Coelho's "The Alchemist"Review Date: 2007-02-07
With honesty, humor and vivid detail, Henry's courageous tale touched my soul, so profoundly, that I kept wanting to know more. I couldn't put it down and finished it in one sitting, wishing that it wouldn't end. It stirred emotions in the same way as Paulo Coelho's, "The Alchemist," in its message of following one's dream, despite all obstacles. (Except, this is no fable; it is a real life piece.)
Along with his brilliant co-author, Sally-Jo Bowman, he weaves an intimate story of strength and perserverence, which will surely be known for decades to come as one of the islands' finest mo`olelo.
This is a must read for everyone and makes for a wonderful gift. It will touch you in surprising ways, and make you want to meet this incredible man and the spiritual place that he would finally call, "home."

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I'm goin' to Hawaii!Review Date: 2002-03-21
If you are going to Hawaii... This book is a Must !Review Date: 2002-03-19
Runge Delivers the GoodsReview Date: 2002-03-16
This is not your ordinary travel guide. It reads more like a converstation with a friend over cocktails. And what better way to plan your next trip than to chat with a friend who has 'been there and done that'?
Be it solitude or 'sauce' that you seek; deserted beaches or a little cha-cha-cha, you'll find it here.
Runge Delivers the GoodsReview Date: 2002-03-16
This is not your ordinary travel guide. It reads more like a converstation with a friend over cocktails. And what better way to plan your next trip than to chat with a friend who has 'been there and done that'?
Be it solitude or 'sauce' that you seek; deserted beaches or a little cha-cha-cha, you'll find it here.
Great Tips!Review Date: 2002-03-09
Just as he did in 'Hot on Hawaii', he makes you want to go to places on various islands that you'd not thought of - or even known of before! The research and detail that has gone into this 2nd effort, is first rate and I applaud the time he put into it.
If you have only one guide book on Hawaii that you want to keep on hand, I suggest that you make it this one!
Tom & Tina Finnigan
San Francisco, CA

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Snorkeler's DelightReview Date: 2008-07-31
Indispensable guide to snorkeling in KauaiReview Date: 2006-01-26
Another Keeper!Review Date: 2008-03-15
beautiful bookReview Date: 2007-12-25
Takes you by the handReview Date: 2007-08-21

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Wish it were still in printReview Date: 2008-10-03
One of my favorite cookbooksReview Date: 2007-02-11
DeliciousReview Date: 2001-01-13
Simply Great CookbookReview Date: 2001-01-04
Tasty and full of life!Review Date: 2006-09-23
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Collectible price: $19.99

ClassicReview Date: 2008-08-08
ExcellentReview Date: 2008-05-17
intriguing and eye-opening!Review Date: 2007-12-24
That a primitive (by European or American standards) people were skilled at ocean navigation was thought absurd. Kon-Tiki was an attempt to show that Oceania could be populated from South America by drifting on rafts and sheer luck of landfall. But it is now established that there was skilled and purposeful exploration and colonization--including Rapa Nui (Easter Island) which is 1000 miles from the nearest other habitable island. We, the Navigators is a fascinating look at "primitive" navigation techniques, and the author himself sailed from Hawaii to Tahiti using only these ancient techniques.
So you'll see how the Polynesians used the sun, moon, and stars to achieve accurate navigation. They also used the ocean swells (as distinct from waves): islands reflect and deflect swells, so by careful observation, you can get a sense of direction to landfall. Land also changes cloud patterns. Birds were watched intently. New Zealand was one of the last places found and peopled--from 1600 miles away from the northeast, perhaps by watching birds migrate in that direction. Different kinds of birds travel different distances from land--some travel 40-50 miles, others 20-25 miles: by observing at dawn where the birds came from, and observing which direction they went towards sunset, and seeing what kind of bird it was, you could tell that there was land, and what direction it was, and how far away it was as well. On leaving land, backsights would be taken to help establish currents and drift. The book has lots of drawings and illustrations--it's a real treat!
An academic book by a knowledgable navigatorReview Date: 2002-04-23
The downside is that it can send you to sleep as the author systematically compares how the navigational techniques are practiced in the various island groups.
The strength of the book is not only its thoroughness but also the fact that the author is a skilled sailor who has gone on trips using these techniques. This makes the material so much more authentic, because the reader can relate how effective these skills are and yet how much practice they require.
The author provides commentary on many practices and relates them to our modern day knowledge. An example was their ability to recognize the impact of sub surface currents, something that is today a rather specialist piece of knowledge not available to the everyday sailor.
Oceanic navigation classicReview Date: 2004-07-27

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I loved it - But check out this Scholar's point by point Review!Review Date: 2006-06-27
The Blessings of Bhutan
Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2002. v, 186 pp. Colour plates, notes, glossary, index. US$24.95, paper.
It is rare that one has the chance to review a book so inadequate that one is hard-pushed to find a positive word to write about it.
The Blessings of Bhutan is, most unfortunately, such a book. One cannot imagine why University of Hawai'i Press, an otherwise reputable press that previously released the charming Painter's Year in the Forests of Bhutan by A. K. Hellum, has now published the Carpenters' recycled clichés and Orientalist imaginings. The authors start out on a hapless tack "... visitors often feel altered by Bhutan ... their inner selves are stirred ... [and] many come home with a nagging feeling that they
were at the edge of learning something important, something primary" (p. 1). With this Conradesque backdrop in place, Russ and Blyth Carpenter enter the Heart of Lightness with their readers in tow. Their account of travelling and working in Bhutan is so personalised that those of us who have never visited their home in the USA wonder why they so frequently refer to it: "Bhutan reminds us of Vida, Oregon. Our hometown has a store ..." (p. 7).
Their rambling anecdotes come across as impressionistic accounts from a journal, and are surely more suited to family archives or a Christmas letter home to friends than to publication as a monograph by an academic press. The authors trade in stereotype and are partial to a disparaging kind of anti-intellectualism, embodied by the statements:
"only a masochist would want to know the names of all the languages spoken in
Central and Eastern Bhutan" and "Bhutan's geography changes from challenging to
nearly hopeless" (p. 8). As if this were not disturbing enough, their hagiography of the kings of Bhutan as embodying "wisdom, strength, vision, and selfless behaviour" which they "daydream about the United States borrowing" (p. 9) is surely at odds with the sentence handed down by a previous king who had a citizen "whipped with peach branches until he convulsed and fell unconscious" (p. 18).
While this book has no scholarly pretensions, and readers would do better to travel to Bhutan with the Lonely Planet guidebook, the lack of engagement with issues that affect contemporary Bhutan, such as the activities of Indian rebels along the southern border or the plight of the Lhotsampa refugees (Bhutanese Hindus of Nepali origin) is simply negligent.
In only one place are these issues touched upon, and then shrouded in euphemism and dodged in an amateurish and unconvincing way: "Many of the things we could say here about the southern problem would be out-of-date by the time this book is published" (p. 168).
In short, this book fails to deliver at all levels. The obvious delight the authors have in Bhutan is marred by their thinly disguised condescension: "in our view, the Bhutanese do not understand the insidious and destructive consequences of television" (p. 174) and platitudinous generalisations such as "we have no hesitations about the essential intellectual capability of the Bhutanese people" (p. 169). At best, perhaps the Carpenters could recycle their text for an in-flight magazine on Bhutan's national airline.
MARK TURIN
University of Cambridge
Don't Miss this GemReview Date: 2003-04-07
An Intriguing Introduction to BhutanReview Date: 2004-06-08
The authors' love and admiration of Bhutan and Bhutanese people is very apparent in their sketches. While many things about Bhutan can easily baffle a tourist (like the almost contradictory sexual attitude of the Bhutanese or the concept of "Gross National Happiness"), they explain these things in terms of the Bhutanese culture. I found the book extremely easy to read and engaging, and appreciated the experiences the Carpenters shared as well as the facts. You can read the book back to front or just skip around and read about which aspects of the culture you're interested in.
This is the first book I have read about Bhutan, and I'm glad I got it!
The Soul of BhutanReview Date: 2005-12-31
Blessings of BhutanReview Date: 2003-06-15

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broccoli reviewReview Date: 2007-05-31
The Broccoli TapesReview Date: 2006-10-26
Her family moves to Hawaii for five months. Sarah's life flipped. Nobody is kind so she has no friends, the teachers are cruel, and since her Grandma is sick, her parents won't pay any attention to her. Now all she has is her weird older brother Sam (oh great), and a tape recorder that she talks to and then sends home to Boston for her class to hear. One day Sam takes Sarah to a forbidden lava field and they both here a yelping. A cat! Its leg was stuck between two rocks. Sam and Sarah couldn't just leave the cat so they pulled and tugged and got the cat out, only to realize that they now have a secret, a friend, and a cat.
I recommend this book to anyone, young or old; I mean who wouldn't want to read a book with an animal, a secret, friend-ship, who knows, maybe a tear or two. I liked how Jan put dialogue, made it clear, put cliff-hangers, and slowly would change the mood to the book.
Out of 10 stars, I would give this book 10. The Broccoli Tapes is a spectacular book.
Affable Ali
A Cat's LifeReview Date: 2004-01-16
There were four things I liked about the book I read. One was when Sara and Sam found a black cat they called "Broccoli." Sara and Sam called the cat Broccoli because when they gave her the first meal from the restaurant, she went right for the broccoli. The second thing I liked was when Sam and Sara met Eddy and became friends with him. That was the only friend they had. The third thing I liked was when Sara would make tapes for her classmates to let them know everything was going O.K. with Broccoli and her. The last thing I really liked was when they found out that Broccoli was a girl and not a boy because they had thought Broccoli was a boy. I recommend this book because it's about showing love and care for an animal.
That cat BroccoliReview Date: 2001-05-23
BROCCOLI TAPESReview Date: 2001-05-31
Collectible price: $29.45

johnarthurReview Date: 2007-01-03
The Providence of GodReview Date: 2006-09-05
A Japanese Fighter Pilot becomes an EvangelistReview Date: 2003-05-13
A materfully written and truly inspirational book!Review Date: 2000-08-16
Reconciliation in the midst of Clash of CivilizationsReview Date: 2001-10-24
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Ben Mahoney had taken on training guide dogs to assist those that had lost their sight to live a much better life. At this time he was training a two-year old golden retriever and "Fisher" was doing quite well. He was almost ready to help those in need of his services. While in training, Ben and Fisher had run into Ben's former police partner, Yoshi Tagama, a cousin of Lani's. Yoshi requested the help of Ben and a guide dog for Lani. Ben wasn't sure that Fisher was ready for active work yet but finally gave in and told Yoshi he would take Fisher to Lani to see how it would work out. His hesitation was further enhanced knowing Lani's past reputation as being too free with the men but realized Lani needed help with her total blindness.
Ben's brother, Ethan and wife, Natalie, are almost always spaced out on alcohol, leaving their adorable daughter, Meg, without caring parents. A boating accident takes the lives of Ethan and Natalie but somehow Meg survived in her life vest. The accident also exposed criminal activity taking place in the area. Ben and Lani then cared for Meg.
The story continues as it brings Ben and Lani closer together through Meg and their feelings for each other even though they did not express those feelings to each other. Lani's life was at risk because the killer felt Lani had seen him before her sight was lost and would someday remember who he was. Lani and Fisher made a great team as they adjusted to life together and Lani grew so attached to him that she told Ben she could never give up Fisher even if she regained her sight, which she felt she would some day.
Yoshi stayed as close to Lani and Meg as he could but he had other police work to do and could not spend every hour protecting them. Lani had several attempts on her life and her senses had saved her along with her friends being on the alert constantly. She even got to the point where she could distinguish by feel the ripe coffee beans and helped in the picking with Meg sometimes at her side and other times with friends and family watching Meg. Meg loved gum and everyone knew that fact as she insisted loudly that she wanted some gum!
The Christian atmosphere all through the book stand out especially well as Lani sometimes wonders why God let all these thing happen but then realized that God had done so many good things for her too. Midnight Tea is a page-turner that is extremely hard to put down. The reading is easy but pleasant and certainly not boring. There are no slow sections to bog you down. I highly recommend it.