"The Empires’ Edge: Militarization, Resistance, and Transcending Hegemony in the Pacific," by Sasha Davis (University of Georgia Press, $22.95)
Why faraway places might become "disposable" and why governments centralize power and monitor their citizens are among the many questions asked in a fascinating geopolitical overview by Sasha Davis, an assistant professor of geography and environmental science at the University of Hawaii at Hilo.
Davis explores differences in how locals and others see a place and, given tensions with North Korea and a global "war on terror," urges consideration of how U.S. military actions from Hiroshima, Bikini Atoll and Tinian Island to Guam, Kahoolawe and Makua Valley might inform our current state.
"The Dark Side of Glory," by Richard McMahon (Telemachus Press, $16.95)
Fans of "M.A.S.H." (and who isn’t?) will enjoy this tale of sexual and military intrigue during the Korean War. Winner of a gold medal for historical fiction from the Military Writers Society of America, the narrative jumps about in time, for instance from a young woman’s murder in 1950s Tokyo to a burial at Punchbowl in 1969. There a deceased general’s biographer, hired by his widow, glimpses a young woman with "Asian features" who may be an illegitimate daughter of a commander who "advanced over the bodies of his men."
The Honolulu author’s suspenseful, sordid plot is nicely carried by sparse, clean prose.
"My Pearl Harbor Scrapbook 1941: A Nostalgic Collection of Memories," by Bess Taubman and Ernest Arroyo (Mapmania, $24.95)
With a foreword by the chief historian for the World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument at Pearl Harbor, this beautifully reimagined scrapbook is filled with period photographs, letters, maps, a draft page of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s "Day of Infamy" speech, news clippings and postcards. A 1940 photo of the fleet’s light display celebrating the end of training is annotated with the president’s decision to keep it in Hawaii as "a deterrent to further Japanese advances in Asia."
Each ship has dedicated pages, and the internment of Japanese-Americans also is addressed. Military leaders on both sides of the conflict are profiled.
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Page Turners highlights books by Hawaii authors and books about Hawaii or of interest to Hawaii readers. To submit a book for consideration, send a copy and information to Features Department, 500 Ala Moana Blvd. Suite 7-210, Honolulu, HI 96813. For more information, email books@staradvertiser.com.