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Behold the Many: A Novel [Hardcover]

Lois-Ann Yamanaka (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 7, 2006
Behold the Many is the eerily beautiful story of three young sisters, Anah, Aki, and Leah. In 1913, they are sent away from their family for treatment for tuberculosis to an orphanage in Hawaii’s Kalihi Valley. Of the three, two will die there, in spite of the nuns’ best efforts to save them, and only Anah, the eldest, will grow to adulthood.

But the ghosts of the dead children are afraid to leave the grounds of St. Joseph’s, which is the only place they have known as home, and as Anah prepares to begin married life away from the orphanage, these ghost children grow angry. Desperate for the love of this girl who has communicated with them since her childhood, jealous of her ability to live in the physical world, and terrified of losing her, the ghosts are determined to thwart Anah’s happiness. One of them places a curse on her that will reverberate through her future and that of her new family. As Anah struggles to appease the dead and to quiet her own guilt for living, it becomes apparent that only through one of her own daughters can redemption be attained.

Poignant, lyrical, and utterly compelling, Behold the Many is a stunning new novel from the critically acclaimed author Lois-Ann Yamanaka. 

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Taking up her familiar themes—family, guilt, abandonment and the curses invoked by the dead on the living—Yamanaka's latest novel builds nicely on her previous, Father of the Four Passages. In 1913, sisters Anah, Aki and Leah are sent to an orphanage on the Hawaiian island of Oahu when they fall ill with tuberculosis. Their family, headed by their hard-drinking Portuguese father who abuses their Japanese mother, is already strained before their departure. Anah promises her sisters that their mother and brother, Charles, will rescue them from the orphanage, but she is wrong: Leah and Aki die. As vengeful ghosts, Anah's sisters taunt and torture her for surviving and for what Aki terms her "lie" to them. With their parents' deaths and the disappearance of Charles, Anah remains cursed even as she attempts to go on. When Anah eventually finds happiness and marries, the chorus of voices from the dead extends the curse to her children. Only many years later—following much suffering and one horrifying event—does Anah find a way to appease the ghosts and to forgive herself. A cacophony of voices both living and dead who speak a variety of Hawaiian dialects spikes the narrative, but Yamanaka's beautiful, harsh prose and thematic vision unify this intense novel. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

A mystical, magical, and, at times, macabre world unfolds in Yamanaka's elegiac tale of three sisters outcast from their family and society in turn-of-the-century Hawaii. Reminiscent of Father Damien's leper colony on the island of Molokai, Oahu's St. Joseph's orphanage is a bleak haven of last resort for children afflicted with the tuberculosis that is devastating the Kalihi Valley. As first Leah, then Aki, and finally Anah contract the disease, the sisters are banished by their monstrous father and forsaken by their powerless mother, left to fend for themselves under the callous negligence of the orphanage's nuns. Of the three sisters, only Anah will survive, but when she leaves St. Joseph's on her eighteenth birthday, she, her future husband, and their burgeoning family are destined to be haunted by the ghosts of Anah's long-dead siblings and the boy who once loved her. Redolent with the island's lush and languid atmosphere, Yamanaka's richly atmospheric novel paints a chillingly spectral portrait of souls tormented by love and guilt. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 1st edition (February 7, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0374110158
  • ISBN-13: 978-0374110154
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.1 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,809,031 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars (4.5) "Where is home when no one is home?", February 7, 2006
This review is from: Behold the Many: A Novel (Hardcover)


In a melding of harsh reality and the world of the spirit, Behold the Many is a novel of love and loss that reaches beyond the grave, the brittle fingers of the dead clutching at the living. Only one sister of three survives her isolation in a TB hospital-orphanage in the secluded Kalihi Valley in Hawaii, three little girls sent away when they develop tuberculosis, one after another, banished so that they will not infect their family, five-year old Leah, then Aki, then Anah. Leah is terrified; Aki is angry. Only Anah will survive, her sisters dying one after the other, Anah left alone in a place where there is little solace and much despair. Lonely, she reaches to the spirit world and the companionship of her sisters. Leah calls out to Anah; Aki curses her living sister and attacks her mercilessly; and Seth, a boy who died before they came, waits for them all. At the family home, their Hawaiian mother goes mad with grief, their Portuguese father demanding she forget those worthless daughters and give him sons.

Anah endures much at the orphanage, the relentless jibes of Sister Bernadine a burden from which she can never escape, her only solace Leah, Aki and Seth. Seth's older brother, Ezroh, is Anah's salvation. It is he who cures her from the cuts and bruises inflicted by Aki that no one at the orphanage can explain, he who offers release with his unconditional love. On her eighteenth birthday, Anah is finally released, leaving behind her sorrows and her sisters in hopes of a better life with Ezroh. Cruel words follow even here, this time from Ezroh's Portuguese aunt, bitter remarks that infect the difficult births of Anah's four daughters: Hosanah, the first-born, disfigured by a careless midwife; Elizabeth thought slow because she refuses to speak; Tori a perfect replica of Anah's beautiful mother; and the frail but spirited Miriam who fights for life against all odds. Through her children, Anah recovers her family, yet she never forgets her siblings or the curse they have laid upon her. She will pay a price for her freedom, though she never imagines how staggering this price will be.

Anah has an indomitable spirit and a generous heart, reaching through the world of the living and the dead, yearning for a lost mother and the sisters she could not save. In a story of stark beauty and brutal reality, Anah's life is painted in the bright red blood of tuberculosis and of childbirth, the yellow dress Leah wears even in death, the dark, dank closets of the orphanage and the blue sky of her marriage to Ezroh. In this extraordinary tale, Yamanaka weaves truth from dreams and breathes life into the spirit world through a girl become woman and mother who embraces all, joy, pain and love, her heart the repository of all their hopes. Luan Gaines/ 2006.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars deep historical tale, February 8, 2006
This review is from: Behold the Many: A Novel (Hardcover)
In 1939 Anah's daughter Hosana dies; though she mourns her loss, Anah prays that the death will lift the curse.

In 1913 Hawaii, young Leah comes down with Tuberculosis; her mother tries to hide the illness, but is caught. The child is sent to a remote orphanage in the Kalihi Valley in the Ko'olau Mountains. One year later her sister Aki joins her and not long afterward another sibling Anah is sent there.

In 1916 Leah dies and subsequently so does Aki. Anah vows to stay there forever and the ghosts of the children who have died there including her two sisters communicate with her. In 1924, Anah marries Ezroh with plans to finally leave the orphanage. However, the ghosts are angry and jealous that she is able to go anywhere while they cannot. They try to stop her marriage, but fail; however she and her family are cursed by one of the spirits. Over the years Anah has several children, but never overcame the guilt of surviving nor of leaving.

In some ways BEHOLD THE MANY is a deep historical tale with plenty of insight into Hawaii and how tuberculosis victims were treated. However, it is the relationship when they lived and after they died between the surviving sister and her two deceased siblings that make for an eerie ghost story. Anah's beliefs that she communicates with all the dead children at the isolated clinic seems very real though some skeptics will say she compensated for her losses. Though time moves too fast making it somewhat difficult to follow, fans will relish this strong ghost story.

Harriet Klausner

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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Behold the Many, August 21, 2010
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If you were thinking about killing yourself before reading this book....DON'T
very depressing.
I kept waiting for something good to happen...
nope...nada....never...not even once
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