A writer born and raised in Honolulu offers an insider’s perspective on Hawaii in a debut historical novel about a family that moves there before the attack on Pearl Harbor.
In the depths of the Depression, the Doyles—Sadira, aka Sadie, and Archie, and their sons, Lionel and Kenny—chafe against the limits of their small town in upstate New York. Tongues wag in Carlisle, mostly about Archie’s drinking. After one too many binges, he’s fired from his job but recommended for one in Hawaii. With high hopes the Doyles set sail in 1936 and find much good in paradise. Sadie snags a job as the society writer for the Honolulu Chronicle, and she is kept busy given that Honolulu is a favorite stop for celebrities and wannabes. But Archie can’t put the cork back in the bottle and squanders more than one opportunity. Kenny, a normal kid, is happy enough, but older brother Lionel is a sensitive (and perceptive) young man subject to wild mood swings. From alternating perspectives, Matthews shows daily life in Hawaii and the trauma of Pearl Harbor and its aftermath. An experienced writer and writing teacher, she ably tells her story through a dual point of view with some sections narrated by Sadie and some by Lionel. Lionel’s perspective is impressive, but in many ways he’s a typical high-drama teenager. Sadie enjoys the glamour of her job even while complaining about it. The Doyles’ story has some wonderfully realized characters, like Renee Manchester, who at first seems a classic floozie but who, readers learn, has much more to her. And the Doyles’ landlady, Mrs. Fong, is a paragon of tough love and wise counsel. But it’s Sadie who holds the family together and who at book’s end is battered but unbowed. Spanning the years from the influenza pandemic of 1918 until the aftermath of World War II in 1946, this story is a saga that earns its magnetism.
A good story in a great setting that will draw in readers.