Hawaii Books
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Great Book for Anyone Looking for a vacation rental or homeReview Date: 2004-12-27
AppraiserReview Date: 2000-08-24
Used price: $0.01

Hawaiian Leprechauns!Review Date: 2006-10-13
A fun Hawaiian children's story that I still think aboutReview Date: 1997-12-09

Used price: $0.59
Collectible price: $10.00

Little Surfer's BookReview Date: 2001-08-10
A surfer's dream.............Review Date: 2001-04-04
This book is filled with colorful illustrations that are bound to make any child's imagination soar. This book is a must for all families with a love of the water and surfing!

Used price: $0.01

High quality, durable formatReview Date: 2005-06-23
This covers just the island of Oahu, which is home to Waikiki and Honolulu. It's broken up into chapters on the land, the ecology, the history, arts & music, sporting & recreation, and so on. All of this makes great plane ride reading. The bulk of the book is a geographically-divided tour around the island, listing beaches, attractions, accomodations, food & drink, etc. I used this to get around Waikiki and found all the info to be up to date and very useful.
Not your average tourist bookReview Date: 2005-04-08
I bought this book from AAA before my first visit to Hawaii. What really surprised me about this book was how the first few chapters were about the Land, Flora&Fauna, History, Government & Economy, and People of the island. From these pages I learned more about the island and its people than your average Hawaiian sun-worshipping tourist.
The book also offers lots of ideas and information for Sports & Entertainment, Shopping, Food and Drinks. Each different area of the island is detailed with a map and minute details about the beaches.
The book lacks the colorful touristy postcard pictures but makes up for it through the sheer amount of information (and good organization) for everyone, be they young or old, jocks or bums, artists or history-buffs, food-connoisseurs or Hawaiian-drink enthusiasts.
Overall a great buy, and will use it on all future trips to O'ahu.
NOTE: This book covers O'ahu island exclusively (and not any of the other 6 Hawaiian islands). There is information on how to reach the other islands though, but nothing beyond that.

Used price: $14.84

An slim, attractive, information-packed book on "Hawaiian treasures"Review Date: 2008-07-14
This book combines exceptionally well-reproduced photographs, drawings, and illustrations, as well as modern photographs of artifacts in collections and museums, with interpretations and text from the limited sources of Hawaiians like David Malo who attempted to record their disappearing culture, even through the biased lens of a missionary education.
Interspersed throughout are reproductions of photographs on a translucent "vellum"; very attractive.
Young notes "The years 1820-1870 were most devastating to the Hawaiian people. Their social oder and religious system had been overthrown, their population was in decline as a result of disease, their forests and farms had been stripped and neglected, and family unity was threatened as a result of the emergence of towns catering to the commercial interests of the foreigners. Their faith in their culture suffered as they were made by the newcomers to feel ashamed of their religion, language, and lifestyle, and in many homes the Hawaiian language was forbidden and reference to Hawaiian ways punished" (p. 7).
Young presents artifacts relating to:
- food
- shelter
- the use of trees
- textiles
- clothing
- canoes and trails
- fishing
- games and recreation
- musical instruments
- war and weapons
- religion
- ornaments
Since I'm particularly interested in honu, Young reports that James King, on one of Cook's voyages, noted "At Atooi [Kauai], some of the women wore little figures of the turtle, neatly formed of wood or ivory, tied to their fingers in the manner we wear rings" (p. 91).
Young, in an afterward, writes "This suppression of traditional culture, which began in the early 1800s, resulted in the loss not only of traditional Hawaiian religion, language, and lifestyle, but also of the art forms represented by Hawaiian artifacts" (p. 97). The existing artifacts, and the minimal descriptions that exist in Hawaiians' own words and in the journals of early explorers and missionaries, is all that exists. When Young uses the word "loss", he means exactly that... it is gone. Our recreations, and interpretations, are our attempts to describe a past that is unrecorded, and lost.
A terrific book for people interested in Hawaiiana.
Truly a "Treasure" of a book !!Review Date: 2000-10-10
One could easily dismiss Young's book as just another "me too" collection of things Hawaiian - but that would be a BIG mistake.
Books about collections of artifacts can be terribly boring and bear a close resemblance to reading a catalog, but Young's beautiful book is about as far away from that category as you can get. He has assembled a varied and amazingly representative collection of Hawaiian artifacts, took high quality photographs of them and then added rich commentary to weave a totally captivating book. As he explains in the introduction, "artifacts are representations of a culture." Young has chosen a cross-section of Hawaiian artifacts that clearly portrays both the richness of artistic achievement and the simultaneous practicality with which Hawaiians dealt with their environment. Many of the artifacts that he has chosen are from the Kailua-Kona area, which makes this book especially interesting to Big Island residents or visitors.
One of the unique features of Hawaiian Treasures that elevates it to "coffee table" status (in addition to the photographs) is that many of the chapters are preceded by semi-transparent vellum pages which are printed with an historical photograph or drawing, or a Hawaiian kapa or fish-netting pattern. The effect is stunning. In the case of the natural materials, you can almost feel the textures! Chapters include such subjects as: early collectors, food, shelter, trees, textiles, clothing, travel, fishing, recreation, musical instruments, weapons, religion, ornaments, etc.
Young uses a very nice combination of photographs (many historical), dictionary-like text entries and interview material to present a surprisingly complete, if brief, overview of the Hawaiian culture. In only 109 pages, he does an excellent job of portraying the complexity, richness and beauty of early Hawaiian life. I've read a lot about Hawai`i, but I learned a lot of new things here (and read about some locations that I have to snoop around now). There is some especially interesting material on the uses of lava caves that I haven't seen before. The only significant way that I think the book might be improved would be to lengthen the descriptions and discussions about some of the artifacts. But then, I suspect that one of Young's purposes in creating this book was to whet people's appetites for more information about the Hawaiians' amazing culture. Hawaiian Treasurers is beautiful, quite remarkable and definitely belongs in everyone's Hawaiian library.


The quandary of a woman striving to find balanceReview Date: 2002-06-04
Nalani of HawaiiReview Date: 2002-05-06

Used price: $13.81

a new side of hawai'iReview Date: 2007-07-29
Very Real and Human StoriesReview Date: 2002-09-02
Their stories were real and often touching. Their feelings and lives, while outwardly very different than what I've ever experienced, were so real and human that it would be almost impossible to not understand and feel for them. They openly share both the good and bad parts of the lives in an effort to get those of us outside the transgender community to see how their stories could be anyone's story. They succeed. Its not an cheap book (almost [$$$]) but its worth every penny if you want to better understand our friends in the trangender community.

Used price: $9.85

oahu restaurants and diningReview Date: 2008-06-23
ANOTHER WINNER!Review Date: 2008-06-20
Used price: $0.30
Collectible price: $50.00

Awe-astounding HawaiiReview Date: 2005-06-15
Over HawaiiReview Date: 2004-01-05

Used price: $27.80

A Vibrant ExperienceReview Date: 2003-12-28
I rate Pacific Journeys - 5/5
A Vibrant ExperienceReview Date: 2003-12-29
I rate Pacific Journeys - 5/5
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