Amazon.com Review
The second novel from Yamanaka, who is also an award-winning poet, is about three kids trying to hold themselves and their family together after the death of their mother. The story is set in the cultural crossroads of Hawaii, where the Ogata kids--Masie, Ivah, and Blu--are forced to find their way through the poverty, violence, and racism of their harsh environment. Displaying her ear for the poetry of real-life language, Yamanaka writes in the direct voice of the children; their visceral experience of home, school, and the personal mythology in their family come through powerfully.
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From Library Journal
Set in the working-class Hawaii of Wild Meat and the Bully Burgers (LJ 11/15/95), Yamanaka's second novel finds the Ogata children surrounded by depravity and lacking all but a small, inner spark of moral character. Their mother is dead, and 13-year-old Eva is trying to give her two younger siblings some semblance of guidance. Eva feels both remorse and shame for her pathetic father, "Poppy," whose constant berating of brother Blu grates on Eva until she can't stand it any more: "Why you gotta make things so hard, Poppy?...You neva use to make so mean to us." When Eva makes the agonizing decision to attend college against her father's wishes, she leaves her siblings without a real role model. From there the story descends deeper into a cycle of despair from which there is no escape. A well-wrought but painful work; recommended for larger collections.?Anna Quan Leon, Scottsdale P.L., Ariz.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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