Tropical Treasures

2020-02-29T08:40:52-08:00March 15th, 2020|

Guest Blog by Linda Ulleseit

My husband’s mother and grandmother were born in Hawaii. He has dozens of relatives there, and we attended our first family reunion in Honolulu this past February. The outpouring of ohana and aloha was amazing! Maybe it’s this connection to family that has always driven my love for Hawaii. Then again, maybe it’s the beautiful setting, the music, and the mai tais!

My husband’s grandmother was my inspiration for The Aloha Spirit. It’s a heavily fictionalized account of her difficult childhood and how she was able to be an amazingly loving and generous woman in spite of it. When my publisher, She Writes Press, asked me for comparable titles for marketing purposes, I immediately thought of Hawaii, by James Michener, and Honolulu and Moloka’i by Alan Brennert. No, I was told. Your comp titles need to be no more than three years old. They need to be good sellers but not super bestsellers because that causes industry professionals to be skeptical. As a guideline, I was told a comp title should have at least 100 reviews and they should, of course, be in my genre. Well, that eliminated From Here to Eternity.

Googling novels about Hawaii provided me with the titles I’ve mentioned as well as nonfiction, romances, children’s books, and memoirs. I needed stories set in territorial Hawaii, about strong female characters, stories that weren’t exclusively focused on World War II. I went direct to the source.

In our visits to the island of Kauai, my husband and I always visit Talk Story Bookstore in Hanapepe. They claim to be the western-most bookstore in the United States. Talk Story is a wonderful mix of new and used books, and they have a delightful store cat named Celeste who is quite the social media darling. Who better to know about Hawaiian fiction? (the bookstore, not the cat) I perused their online catalog, newsletter, and author events.

I discovered some treasures I could use and some I couldn’t, but I read them all. Here are some of my favorites:

The Last Aloha by Gaellen Quinn is probably the closest to my book I could get. It’s set in territorial Hawaii-the time before it became a state–and is about a girl adjusting to major changes in her family, including cultural ones.

Sara Ackerman is one of my new favorite authors. Her books, The Lieutenant’s Nurse and Island of Sweet Pies and Soldiers are set in World War II Hawaii. I can hardly wait for Red Sky Over Hawaii, which comes out in June. Like my book, these books show civilian life in the islands during the war.

I also discovered Kiana Davenport, author of family sagas Shark Dialogues, Song of the Exile, and House of Many Gods. The language of her writing is spellbinding, truly invoking the rhythms of ocean waves and wind. I can only aspire to this level of lyricism in my own writing.

The most prolific author I discovered was Toby Neal. Her memoir, Freckled, tells of her growing up on Kauai during the sixties. She has written several character-driven crime and thriller novel series. Nothing works for comp to my own book except that her characters are strong, nonetheless I enjoy her writing.

One nonfiction book I have already reread is Lost Kingdom: Hawaii’s Last Queen, the Sugar Kings and America’s First Imperial Adventure by Julia Flynn Siler. It details the conflict between Hawaiians, sugar plantation owners, and missionaries in the tumultuous last years of the kingdom of Hawaii.

So read and enjoy all these books, but most importantly please read The Aloha Spirit, to be released in August of 2020 but available for preorder now.

 

Linda Ulleseit, born and raised in Saratoga, California, has an MFA in writing from Lindenwood University. She is a member of the Hawaii Writers Guild, Women Writing the West, and a founding member of Paper Lantern Writers, was. Linda is the author of Under the Almond Trees, which was a semifinalist in the Faulkner-Wisdom Creative Writing Contest, and The Aloha Spirit, to be released in 2020. Linda believes in the unspoken power of women living ordinary lives. Her books are the stories of women in her family who were extraordinary but unsung. She recently retired from teaching elementary school and now enjoys writing full time. Find out more about Linda and her books at ulleseit.com

 

 

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