Color of the Sea by John Hamamura

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: November 2007
  • 320pp
  • Sales Rank: 114,621
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: November 2007
    • Publisher: Random House Inc
    • Format: Paperback, 320pp
    • Sales Rank: 114,621

    Synopsis

    “Hamamura writes deftly and powerfully, whether about the subtle vibrations of the human heart or the bloody convulsions of war.”--David Maine, author of The Preservationist and Fallen

    Growing up in a time between wars, Sam Hamada finds that the culture of his native Japan is never far from his heart. Sam is rapidly learning the code of the samurai in the late 1930s on the lush Hawaiian Islands, where he is slowly coming into his own as a son and a man.

    But after Sam strikes out for California, where he meets Keiko, the beautiful young woman destined to be the love of his life, he faces crushing disappointment---Keiko’s parents take her back to Japan, forcing Keiko to endure their attempts to arrange her marriage. It is a trial complicated by how the Japanese perceive her---as too Americanized to be a proper Japanese wife and mother---and its pain is compounded by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, which ignites the war that instantly taints Sam, Keiko, and their friends and family as enemies of the state.

    Sam himself is most caught between cultures when, impressed by his knowledge of Japanese, the U.S. Army drafts and then promotes Sam, sending him on a secret mission into a wartime world of madness where he faces the very real risk of encountering his own brother in combat.

    From the tragedies of the camps through to the bombing of Hiroshima, where Sam’s mother and siblings live, Sam’s very identity both puts his life at risk and provides the only reserve from which he can pull to survive. In this beautifully written historical epic about a boy in search of manhood, a girl in search of truth, and two peoplesdivided by war, Sam must draw upon his training, his past, and everything he has learned if he’s ever to span his two cultures and see Keiko, or his family, again.
    “Hamamura’s writing is sleek and powerful, and his evocation of the Japanese-American experience compelling. A haunting, beautiful story of love, honor, and dedication, Color of the Sea is a remarkable novel.”--Holly Payne, author of The Virgin’s Knot and The Sound of Blue

    “Hamamura’s first novel is a marvel, a revelation, the story of a man torn between two great loves, two great cultures, two complex and evolving worlds. Bravo.”--James Dalessandro, author of 1906 and Bohemian Heart

    Publishers Weekly

    Hamamura's broad debut follows a Japanese language teacher raised in Hawaii as he finds love and as the U.S. and Japan drift into war. Isamu "Sam" Hamada, born in Hawaii to Japanese parents and raised in Japan until age nine, leaves Japan in 1930 to be reared by a Japanese-American family in Hawaii, before moving to California. A constant for the intense but likable Sam is his dedication to the martial arts, a passion shared by Yanagi Keiko, the American-born young woman he meets in California. Their love is haunted by an earlier liaison of Sam's, but Keiko and Sam press on until she leaves for Japan in the spring of 1940 to finish high school and, it is planned, marry a man chosen by her grandparents. As the war begins, Keiko's family is deported from Japan to the U.S., while Sam is recruited by the U.S. military intelligence, and a slim second chance comes into view. The romantic material is solid if idealized; various martial arts chapters have a clumsily formal quality; Sam's final military adventure at Okinawa strains credibility; an extended passage on the bombing of Hiroshima is motivated only by placing Sam's parents and siblings there. But Hamamura has a real command of the relevant history and packs a great deal of it into several dense but lucid and accessible story lines. (Apr.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    John Hamamura was born in the final year of WWII in a U.S. Army hospital in Minnesota. His father was a GI Japanese language instructor. His mother's family was behind barbed wire at a camp in southern Arkansas. His father's mother and siblings lived in Hiroshima; two of them survived the atomic bomb. He lives in Oakland, California.

    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 3Reviews: 2

    A wonderful story that will make you forever respect Japanese-American soldiers and civilians of theby Anonymous

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    December 21, 2007: John Hamamura tells an unbiased story of the hardships Jpansese-Americans went through in his novel, Color of the Sea. He gives readers no mercy with the many sad events, forbidden loves, and loss of lives that occur in this novel. The characters all create a very real-seeming scenario that is sure to keep you turning the pages. Sergeant Sam Hamada, the main character of this novel, moved to Hawaii at a very young age, leaving his mother and siblings behind in Japan. He excels quickly in American life and is trained to become a samurai by one of my favorite characters, Fujiwara-san. Fujiwara-san is an old man whose supreme physical and mental strength would impress any reader. Throughout the rest of the book, Sam lives many places, accomplishes many tasks, and goes through many hardships, so do his family and long-time friends. This historical fiction novel is a must read for everyone. Pick it up today!

    A MUST READ for everyone!by Anonymous

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    May 03, 2006: This book is not only beautifully written, but the story is both heartbreaking and uplifiting at the same time. There is appeal for both sexes. It's a story about the strength of love in war and about overcoming all of the challenges we face on a daily basis. I couldn't put this book down.