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Go to My LibrarySnow Falling on Cedars
- Language
- English
- Published in
- Publisher
- Vintage Books
- Pages
- 460
- ISBN
- 9780780794870
What unfolds is more than a search for a killer; it is an excavation of memory and buried history. At the center of the trial is the local newspaperman, a war veteran who shares a complicated past with the defendant's wife, and a bitter land dispute between the two families. The case unearths memories of a forbidden love, the injustice of wartime internment, and the deep lines that divide the community. This novel examines how the secrets of the past can shape the pursuit of justice in the present.
Subjects
Original edition details
Other editions (25)
Snow Falling on Cedars A Novel (PEN/Faulkner Award)
1995 • Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
English
Snow Falling On Cedars
1994 • HarperCollins
English
Snow Falling on Cedars
1996 • Chivers Audio Books
English
Snow Falling on Cedars
1999 • Vintage Books
English
Snow Falling on Cedars
2000 • Bloomsbury
English
Other editions

Snow Falling on Cedars A Novel (PEN/Faulkner Award)
1995 • Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
English

Snow Falling On Cedars
1994 • HarperCollins
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
1996 • Chivers Audio Books
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
1999 • Vintage Books
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
2000 • Bloomsbury
English

雪落香杉树
2017 • 作家出版社
Chinese

Snow Falling on Cedars
2008 • Pearson Education
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
1994 • Harcourt Brace
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
2000 • Bloomsbury
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
1994 • Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
1999 • Random House Audio
English

A Civil Action
1998 • Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
1995 • Bloomsbury
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
1995 • Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
2009 • Bloomsbury
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
2001 • Books on Tape
English

Snow Falling on Cedars (Large Print Edition)
1996 • Thorndike Pr
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
1995 • Vintage Books
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
1995 • Vintage Books
English

Snow Falling on Cedars
2007 • Bloomsbury
English

La neige tombait sur les cèdres
1997 • Seuil
French

Mientras nieva sobre los cedros
2001 • Tusquets Editores
Spanish

Mientras nieva sobre los cedros
1997 • Tusquets
Spanish

Mientras Nieva sobre los Cedros
2001 • Tusquests Editores Mexico, S.A. de C.V.
Spanish

Snow Falling on Cedars
1994 • Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Trade & Reference Publishers
English
The trial begins its slow, methodical march. The county sheriff, Art Moran, recounts the morning of September 16, when Carl's boat, the *Susan Marie*, was found adrift, its fishing lights still burning in the daylight. He tells of boarding the silent vessel, of the ominous tidiness of the cabin, and of the grim task of hauling in the net. Carl's face showed first, turned up toward the sunlight, his mouth open. He was hanging by the buckle of his overalls, and on his head, just above the left ear, was a deep, crushing wound. “He banged his head,” his deputy had whispered, pointing to the dented skull. “Must have banged it against the gunnel going over.”
Nels Gudmundsson, Kabuo's defense attorney, rises with a geriatric slowness. At seventy-nine, he is blind in one eye, but the other seems to see with a preternatural clarity. Through his questioning, a different story begins to surface. He probes the details of the batteries found on both boats - a mismatched D-6 forced into the D-8 well on Carl's boat, while Kabuo's boat runs on D-6s. He questions the coroner, Horace Whaley, a man haunted by his own war service, who testifies that Carl drowned, that foam at his mouth proved he was alive when he hit the water. But the head wound? Nels presses. Could it have happened *after* death, as the sheriff and his deputy struggled to haul the heavy, stiffened body from the sea? “Is that possible?” Nels asks. The coroner concedes that it is. “Possible,” he says. “I guess it is - but not likely.”
The trial's proceedings are a constant hum beneath Ishmael's own memories, which rise unbidden and powerful. He remembers a time before the war, a time of sun-warmed tidal flats and the secret world inside a hollow cedar tree. He sees Hatsue as a girl of fourteen, her black hair spread against her back to dry, her skin tasting of salt when he kissed her. For four years, that hollow cedar was their sanctuary, a place where the divisions of the world - he a *hakujin*, she Japanese - seemed to melt away in the scent of moss and their own young heat. Their love felt preordained, a force as natural as the tide. He had given his whole soul to it, believing it was the biggest thing there was, the only thing that mattered.
But the world outside their tree did not agree. On a Sunday in December, the news of Pearl Harbor arrived, and the island's fragile peace was shattered. Fear and suspicion curdled the air. Ishmael's father, Arthur, used his newspaper, the *San Piedro Review*, to plead for reason and tolerance, but his was a lonely voice. The FBI came for Hatsue's father, arresting him for possessing dynamite he used to clear stumps. Then came the evacuation order. On the day before she was to be sent away, Hatsue met Ishmael in their cedar tree one last time. In his desperation, he pressed himself upon her, wanting to seal their love against the coming separation. But as he moved inside her, she knew with a chilling clarity that it was wrong. “No, Ishmael,” she whispered, pulling away. “Never.” He watched her walk away through the dusk, and that image - of the boy he was, standing at the edge of the strawberry fields with his arm outstretched - became the wound around which his life would form.
The prosecution builds its case around motive, a story of land and bitterness rooted in that same history. Carl's mother, Etta Heine, takes the stand, a stout, formidable woman. She tells of the seven acres of strawberry fields her husband had agreed to sell to Kabuo's father before the war. With the Miyamotos exiled to an internment camp and one final payment missed, she sold the entire farm to another man, Ole Jurgensen. When Kabuo returned from fighting for his country in Europe, he came to her, demanding his family's land. “You sold our land out from under us,” he had told her. Etta testifies that from that day forward, Kabuo was her son's enemy, a man who glared at her with hatred in his eyes. The story becomes a feud, with seven acres of soil at its heart.
Hatsue takes the stand, and then Kabuo himself, telling a different story of that foggy night at sea. It was not a violent confrontation, but a chance encounter born of emergency. He had found Carl adrift, his batteries dead. He came aboard the *Susan Marie* not as an attacker, but as a helper, loaning Carl one of his own D-6 batteries. In the close quarters of the cabin, the two men, who had been friends as boys, finally spoke of the land. They had argued, yes, but then they had come to an agreement. Carl had put out his hand, and they had sealed a deal for the seven acres. “A thousand down,” Carl had said. “We can sign papers tomorrow.” Kabuo had left him that night not as an enemy, but as a man whose deepest dream was about to be realized.
As the storm rages, shutting down the island's power and burying it in snow, Ishmael is consumed by a reckless energy. He drives through the blizzard to the coast guard station, seeking context for a weather story but driven by something deeper. In a dusty, forgotten records room, he finds it: the radio log for the night of September 15. A freighter, the *S.S. West Corona*, lost in the fog, had cut across Ship Channel Bank at 1:42 A.M., throwing a massive wake. Five minutes later, at 1:47 A.M., Carl Heine's watch had stopped. Ishmael holds the truth in his pocket, a truth that can free Kabuo but might cost him the last lingering fantasy of Hatsue returning to him. He is the keeper of facts, but his heart is a landscape of its own, ruled by a history of loss.
In the pre-dawn stillness, after a night of wrestling with his ghosts in the cold rooms of his childhood home, Ishmael makes his choice. He finds Hatsue, and together they go to the sheriff. They find Carl's boat, the *Susan Marie*, stored in a dark warehouse. High on the mast, just where Kabuo said it would be, are the cut twine lashings where Carl had tied an emergency lantern. And on the port gunnel below, they find a small fracture in the wood, and in it, three strands of blond hair. Carl had climbed the mast to retrieve his lantern just as the freighter's wake hit. He had fallen, his head striking the gunnel on his way into the sea.
The charges are dismissed. In the courthouse corridor, Kabuo Miyamoto is set free, and he turns to his wife. Ishmael watches them through his camera's viewfinder as they kiss, a long, deep kiss of reunion and relief. He takes the photograph, then walks back to his office. He rolls a sheet of paper into his father's old Underwood typewriter and begins to write. He understands that accident rules every corner of the universe, that the sea and the snow and the freighter are all indifferent forces. The only realm where it is different, the only place where there is purpose and choice, is the chamber of the human heart.
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Rating Sources
Readers frequently praise the book for its captivating and profound subject matter, which skillfully weaves together elements of a police procedural, courtroom drama, historical fiction, and a poignant love story. Many reviewers highlight the novel's poetic, lyrical, and masterful writing style, which effectively creates a strong sense of place and atmosphere, immersing the reader in the Puget Sound setting with vivid, tactile descriptions of nature and weather. The book is lauded for its deep exploration of significant themes such as racism, prejudice, particularly concerning the internment of Japanese Americans during and after World War II, justice, obsession, and the lasting emotional trauma of war. Furthermore, readers appreciate the well-drawn, full-blooded characters and the narrative’s ability to evoke strong emotions, especially regarding young love and the challenges of human relationships. The use of flashbacks is often cited as an effective device for providing rich historical context and character depth, contributing to a gripping mystery that many found ultimately satisfying and thought-provoking.
However, a notable number of readers express frustration with the book's pacing, describing it as slow, dense, and at times plodding. A recurring criticism targets the author's extensive use of seemingly irrelevant or repetitive details and backstories for minor characters, as well as lengthy descriptions of scenery and courtroom procedures, which some felt overwhelmed the core narrative and diluted its central themes. The language, while lauded as poetic by some, was found to be overly flowery, dull, or even meaningless by others, with some reviewers wishing for less descriptive prose and more focus on character and plot. Additionally, some courtroom scenes were deemed boring or repetitive. A few critics found the plot predictable, the love story trite, or the dialogue uneven, with certain characters lacking depth. There were also comments that the novel felt "too careful" or sentimentalized its characters, lacking the raw "heat" or critical edge that some expected when addressing sensitive topics like racial prejudice.
Despite these criticisms, the overall sentiment among reviewers leans strongly positive, with many ultimately loving or highly recommending the book, even if it required perseverance through an initially slow pace. It is often described as a "gem" or a "beautiful book" that offers a rich, immersive reading experience. The novel is particularly recommended for readers who appreciate a multi-genre approach, enjoy character-driven stories, and are interested in historical contexts, especially the treatment of Japanese Americans during a painful period. It appeals to those who value atmospheric writing and a strong sense of place, as well as readers who are willing to engage with complex themes of prejudice, justice, and human resilience. Readers who enjoy literary fiction with a thoughtful, reflective tone, and who appreciate a story that delves deeply into the human heart and the nuances of perception, are likely to find this book a rewarding experience.
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