I first read Honolulu, by Alan Brennert, several years ago, and this is the novel that sparked my interest in Hawaii. Before reading Honolulu, my picture of Hawaii was hulu, surfing, the last Hawaiian queen, and mainland American honeymooner, I didn’t realize quite the influence of Japanese, Korean and Chinese immigrants on Hawaiian life. This got me reading a lot more about Hawaii… as usual.

Jin, nicknamed Regret in a family who prefers sons, leaves her village in Korea and makes her way to Hawaii with the other picture brides. They’ve been promised to Korean men, but that’s just about the only thing that’s true about their husbands-to-be. Jin dreams of prosperity and romance in Honolulu, but her husband isn’t exactly a prince. She also dreams of earning enough money to rescue Blossom, a little girl promised as a small wife to Jin’s brother, and bring her to Hawaii. Although Jin has years of hardships and challenges in her new home, the story is ultimately  uplifting and filled with the ohana spirit. Her Korean picture-bride girlfriends, Hawaiian Joe and Esther, and their complicated family, Jin’s second husband and children (spoiler alert!), and even her Japanese neighbors are all part of her ohana by the end of the novel.

I loved the mix of exotic, beautiful Hawaiian landscape and Jin’s personal adventures. Sure, it’s a land of sunshine and bright flowers, but Jin’s lot is working in the pineapple-canning factory or sugar cane fields. I also bookmarked basically every place where Jin went to eat, and some of them are still around.

View Comments

  • I always wanted to visit Hawaii, but I feel that not knowing specific words for things would get me in trouble.

Recent Posts

The Incredible Story of Cooking

The Incredible Story of Cooking: From Prehistory to Today, 500,000 Years of Adventure is written…

The Secret People

The Secret People is John Wyndham's first novel, a pulpy adventure story about the civilization…

Yevgeny Zamyatin’s We

Written about 100 years ago, We, by Yevgeny Zamyatin, is often considered the first dystopian…

Black Stars: The Visit

The Visit is a specfic short story by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie as part of the…

The British Invasion

The British Invasion!, by French author and illustrator Hervé Bourhis, offers a fun visual  year-by-year…

Doomsday Book

Connie Willis’s Doomsday Book combines science fiction and historical fiction in a time travel drama,…