I enjoyed this book very much. I went to my local library looking for something good and different; East Wind, Rain lived fit the bill nicely. What caused me to pull the book off the shelf was the title. Then, the story itself, based on a real life incident: the tale of a Japanese Zero pilot who crash lands on a small Hawaiian island after participating in the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor that killed 3,000 American servicemen on December 7th, 1941.
The island NishiKaichi puts his plane down on, a small one in the Hawaiian chain, called Niihau, was owned by Alymer Robinson, a Christian landowner who insisted that the Hawaiians that lived and worked on his island, live in a primitive and Christian state. There were none of the modern conveniences available in 1940 (jeeps, two way radios, refrigerators, radios, etc.) on the island. So the workers were pretty much ignorant of the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor, an event which precipitated America’s entry into WWII. As the pilot sat, strapped unconscious in his downed Zero, he was rescued and ‘taken into custody’ by one of the Hawaiian bosses on the island, Howard Kaleohano. Howard, the only Hawaiian on the island that could read English, was vaguely aware of the rising tensions between Japan and America, having on occasion read some news articles on the old newsprint used to wrap supplies sent to the island. He was immediately suspicious about the pilot but, per his orders, decided to wait the return of Mr. Robinson who had gone to the neighboring island of Kauai to get supplies. The other major players in this drama are the Haradas, a Nisei couple who eventually join up with the Zero pilot to ensure the victory of the Japanese forces they were sure would soon arrive.
The book is compelling and very well written. I admire Caroline Paul for tackling a touchy subject for her novel and making it all work. My only criticism is that none of the characters stand out memorably. There is no Scarlett O’Hara (Gone With the Wind), no Private Robert E. Lee Prewitt, (From Here to Eternity). The incident itself stars in this tale. And it all works.