Daughter of Molokaβi by Alan Brennert β 309 pages
ARC courtesy of St. Martinβs Press in exchange for an honest review
Book Blurb:
The book follows young Ruth from her arrival at the Kapi’olani Home for Girls in Honolulu, to her adoption by a Japanese couple who raise her on a farm in California, her marriage and unjust internment at Manzanar Relocation Camp during World War IIβand then, after the war, to the life-altering day when she receives a letter from a woman who says she is Ruthβs birth mother, Rachel.
DAUGHTER OF MOLOKAβ²I expands upon Ruth and Rachelβs 22-year relationship, only hinted at in MOLOKAβ²I. Itβs a richly emotional tale of two womenβdifferent in some ways, similar in othersβwho never expected to meet, much less come to love, one another. And for Ruth it is a story of discovery, the unfolding of a past she knew nothing about.Β
My Review: 4 stars
When I saw that Alan Brennert was writing Daughter of Molokaβi as a sequel to the beloved Molokaβi, I was beside myself with joy. It took much consideration to rate this book. The first and last third I adored and couldnβt put down, but the middle section seemed heavy handed in historical information. I actually skimmed a bit during these pages. Perhaps because it felt like an educational interruption or maybe because I just wanted to move forward with the story.
In this book we see some return characters as well as many new ones. Brennert has the pulse on familial love and creates great characters with considerable dimension. Although this book could easily stand alone, the return characters are rich with history from Molokaβi so Iβd encourage reading that first if you have the time.
I found myself talking about things I learned from this book in common conversations. So much to discuss and wrap my head around! Let’s see, there wasΒ abandonment, immigrants, trust, family feuds, family love, treatment of the Japanese, life in Hawaii, hard work, adoption, leprosy, guilt, forgiveness, mothers/daughter relationships and so much more. The book painfully portrayed internment camps that left me utterly ashamed about this time in our history.
Overall, a great sequel. This reader would be happy to see one more book about the next generation of this strong and determined family.
Quotes I liked:
People disappointed; animals never did.βΒ
-βRuth marveled at how two soulsβ two completely different speciesβ could make each other so happy. If you were kind to animals, they repaid that kindness a thousandfold.β
– βI am secure in the knowledge that I am the mother of your heart,” Etsuko said, smiling. “But she is the mother of your blood. She deserves to see what a fine woman you have becomeβΒ
– βThere might be more to the universe than any one religion could explain.βΒ
– βI’m lucky, you see: I had two mothers. One gave life to me; one raised me. But they both loved me. You know, some people don’t even get that once… There’s only one disadvantage, really, to having two mothers. You know twice the love… but you grieve twice as much.βΒ