Poor Rachel is doomed not only to suffer horribly but also to bear witness to history: a history that includes the end of the monarchy, the US annexation, the arrival of movies and airplanes, the Depression, and Pearl Harbor. As the years pass, Rachel’s friends die she befriends Sister Catherine, whose affection will sustain her but, with the exception of her father, she has no contact with her family. There, in a hospital run by Catholic nuns, she lives with other young girls affected in varying degrees. Considered dangerously contagious, Rachel is sent to the settlement on Molaka’i. A few months later, Rachel is found to have leprosy, and the happy life the family has enjoyed ends. She’s five at the start, when her father, a sailor, comes back in time for Christmas with another doll for her collection and gifts for her older siblings Sarah, Ben, and Kimo. As much a record of her life as of the changes in Hawaii itself over the years, screenwriter and fantasy author Brennert ( Her Pilgrim Soul, 1990, etc.) vividly and graphically details both the landscape and the disease as he tells Rachel’s story. The chronicle of leprosy-infected Rachel Kalama begins in 1891 in Honolulu and ends in the late 1960s on isolated Moloka’i, site of the Kalaupapa Leprosy settlement. A gritty story of love and survival in a Hawaiian leper colony: more a portrait of old Hawaii than a compelling narrative.
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