The Pohaku
A Novel
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- Prenotazione
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- Uscita prevista: 3 feb 2026
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- 23,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
From the award-winning author of Hula, a dazzling saga about the generations of women tasked with protecting the history and place that made them.
A young woman lies comatose in a hospital, watched by her estranged grandmother. Mystery surrounds the woman’s fall—did she jump off the cliff, or was she swept away by a wave? Her grandmother suspects it is linked to the pōhaku, an ancient stone that their family was tasked with protecting.
In this novel spanning generations across Hawai`i and California, it soon becomes clear that the pōhaku’s story must survive if there is to be any hope of the family’s reconciliation with their home, with nature, and with each other.
Reminiscent of Yaa Gyasi’s Homegoing, Min Jin Lee’s Pachinko, and Tommy Orange’s There, There, The Pōhaku is an immersive and bold novel about the history, perseverance, and resilience of the Hawaiian people.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
An aging woman unburdens herself of a story she's carried for decades about her family's links to a secret history of Hawai`i in the muddled sophomore effort from Hakes (Hula). In August 1992, teenager Mo`opuna falls at Queen's Bath, a treacherous tide pool on Kaua`i, and slips into a coma. She's visited in the hospital by her grandmother, who tells Mo`opuna a story beginning with the 1777 birth of Maui royal child Ka`ahumanu, whose stillborn twin, known as the "stone child," becomes a sacred stone called the pōhaku. Ka`ahumanu is raised by nursemaid Kaluaua, Mo`opuna's ancestor, who's entrusted with protecting the pōhaku. Decades later, with the arrival of more and more foreigners to the Hawaiian islands, Kaluaua sends the pōhaku to California with her granddaughter, to keep it from being discovered by colonists. As Mo`opuna's grandmother reveals in her monologue, she is now the keeper of the pōhaku, and the duty will fall to Mo`opuna if she recovers. Hakes successfully evokes the grandmother's conflicted feelings about her burden, which contributed to her strained relationship with her daughter as well as Mo`opuna, but the novel is hard to follow, due in part to the jumble of Hawaiian terms and the drawn-out yet sketchy historical details, particularly of California's 19th-century development. It's a mixed bag.