Snow Falling on Cedars

by David Guterson
Snow Falling on Cedars  
published 1999 by Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
first published 1995
binding Paperback
isbn 074754655X   (isbn13: 9780747546559)
literary awards PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and the American Booksellers Association Book of the Year Award, 1995
description This is the kind of book where you can smell and hear and see the fictional world the writer has created, so palpably does the atmosphere come through...more
date added
10-22-06



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 7722)



SVK
02/18/08

Read in January, 2005
recommends it for: anyone, Pacific Northwest lovers
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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michael spencer
Read in August, 2007
3.5 stars, though it says differently above. Worth reading, and owning, but perhaps I should have bought it on sale. Reviewing this book is taking me a good amount of time after finishing it. There are many things that I think ought to be said about the book, but I am unsure how they all fit together. In addition to this, I have to keep myself unaware of the award-status and the fact that my grandfather was a navyman and a sailor at heart.

The language is rough but rhythmic, representative of...more
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Madeline
You know that guy who's at every party, the one who loves to hear himself talk and tells long-winded stories while the unlucky few who got caught in his gravitational pull nod politely and and start eyeing the exits?
Yeah. David Guterson is That Guy.
His book has a really intersesting subject: a few years after World War Two, a man of Japanese descent is accused of killing a white man on the small island community of San Piedro. The story follows the trial and breaks every now and then for f...more
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Pauline
Pauline rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
08/23/08

bookshelves: adult-fiction, read-2008
Read in August, 2008
Carl Heine a local fisherman is found dead tangled up in his fishing net. The sheriff takes the body to be examined and the corner finds a head trauma that reminds him of the type of trauma caused by a gun butt, the type a Japanese soldier would be trained to inflict. The Sheriff searches the boat of the American citizen of Japanese descent, Kabuo, and finds enough evidence to charge him with the murder of Carl Heine.

"Snow Falling on Cedars" is a book that confronts racism and its...more
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Mrs. Turnbow
Read in January, 2008
This book grabbed me and wouldn't let me go ... at first. I had a hard time putting it down and doing required things to love, like eating and sleeping. But near the end of the book, it began to lose me. Let me elaborate.

The book begins with a murder trial 10 years after World War II. On a tiny island in the United Sattes called San Piedro Sound, murder hasn't been as issue in many years. But a fisherman is dead, and foul play seems to be involved.

The suspest is a Japanese American who ...more
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Joe
03/29/08

Read in January, 2008
This book was recommended to me by a number of people and as a result I had very high expectations by the time I actually picked it up. However, this was one case where high expectations did not lead to disappointment. I had no trouble getting in to this novel and after the first few chapters I couldn’t put it down.

I found the descriptive writing style to be very effective and enjoyable to read. Some other reviewers mentioned being bored by the slow-paced development of the plot and I...more
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Kristine
bookshelves: unremarkable
Read in January, 2002
recommends it for: ppl who don't expect much
When I found the word "cedars" 7 times on a 2 page spread, I shut down. The language is simple; maybe I'm supposed to perceive it as deep, mysterious, or simply written in a beautiful way, but I just found it dull. I was so tired of hearing about snow and cedars.

I think it had a trial in it, and a Japanese fisherman, and some discrimination; maybe it happened in an internment camp in Washington state or something. Or maybe the main character is investigating his father's invol...more
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Visha
05/12/08

Read in March, 2008
Philip Gerard read aloud the first few paragraphs of this book in his Book-Length Narrative class last spring as a demonstration of quickly establishing tone, setting, and deadlines. Finally, I've had the opportunity to sit down and read it. It's now one of my favorites. The organization of the book is one of the main reasons I would recommend it to writers. The structure is strong - a murder trial that unfolds over a few days, while the majority of the narrative is told in flashbacks. I li...more
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Taylor
12/06/07

bookshelves: fiction, own, the-power-of-love
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for: people who like court dramas, unrequited love, racial relations, novels that blend love and war
Just another book that makes me wish I had read it prior to seeing the movie. BUT, even having seen the movie, it was still a pretty engrossing and relatively simple read.

Basically, Ishmael meets Hatuse when they're young, they fall in love. She's taken away to an internment camp after Pearl Harbor and meets another man there who she marries. Her husband is eventually on trial for the murder of a white man. The story focuses mostly on Ishmael, but also has chapters from various points of vie...more
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Keith
05/14/08

Read in May, 2008
recommended to Keith by: Bev Murphy
Snow Falling on Cedars is an incredibly deep book. You'll learn the intricacies of the lives of a dozen or more "islanders." At the same time, the author investigates the topics of war-time hysterics, racism, love, uncertainty of life, fate, and much more. The book claims to be a story depicting a courtroom trial of the accused, a Japanese-American, that carries the weight of post-war tension between Americans and anything remotely Japanese. That is a great premise for a boo...more
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Pamela
12/27/07

Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: hmmm.....courtroom thriller buffs, I guess.
I have to say, although it was a generally easy read, I was disappointed in the fact that it was an award winner. I believe it won the Faulkner? I usually expect more greatness from an award winner. I was disappointed in the character development primarily in the main characters, Hatsue and Ishmael. I wanted to be more in their heads and more in their visceral selves as far as the experiences they had. On the whole I think the book could have been more of an epic if the author had spent mor...more
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Colleen
bookshelves: lit-fic
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in October, 2007
Overall, I was disappointed by this book. It could have been amazing, but Guterson doesn't seem to be able to create a compelling story or fully flesh out his characters. His greatest strength may be his ability to convey place - not in his occasionally overwrought, almost painfully flowery metaphors and similes, but in the rare moments where he captures the essence of the Pacific northwest in small but important details, simply stated. His language is evocative and moody, and there's no ques...more
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Lara
08/29/08

Read in August, 2008
So far I'm loving this book! I can't believe I have had it on my shelf for years and never read it! Great mix of courtroom drama and backstory and mystery. The descriptive language about the people and place draw me right in.
UPDATE:
Ok, still not finished with this book and it's been a while. I look at my original review (and star rating, which was 5, now 4) It's starting to drag. It pulled me in, now I sort of feel like Carl Heine trapped in his net...bobbing there...waiting for someon...more
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Regan
09/12/07

bookshelves: american, fiction, japanese, period
Read in January, 1999
recommends it for: my enemies.
I don't understand what the craze about this book was. I read it in high school, and thought it was terrible then, and I still stand by that thought.

Gutherson seems like a writer who couldn't make up his mind what kind of debut novel he wanted to write, so he just threw every genre he could into one book. Just from my memory over 7 years ago there was a courtroom drama, a love story, something with a sad, lonely old man, discrimination against the japanese, internment camps, and I think ...more
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Tifnie
01/17/08

Read in November, 2004
recommended to Tifnie by: Brian
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Richard
Read in January, 2003
A novel set in the San Juan Islands of Washington State in 1954 where a young Japanese American is accused of killing a fellow fisherman. Lots of description that builds out the characters and also the place. Not any action, strictly a book about character and place. There is good description from the Japanese viewpoint. The Japanese families depicted in the book were also interned in Manzanar in the Mojave Desert during WWII because the U. S. Government basically didn’t trust them because...more
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Rebecca
Read in August, 1997
This was the required summer reading for AP U.S. History (junior year). A group of us from the enterprising "junior honors crowd" even set up a BBS to share our discussions, chapter by chapter. Too bad my friend Kim's Geocities subscription or whatever expired long ago. I'd love to see our commentary again.

Anyway, this story was a unique and compelling angle on the ramifications of World War II for ordinary American communities, specifically a small fishing village in Washington, w...more
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Nomanisan
Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: anyone
Set on an island off Washington state about 10 years after WWII, this book is marvelous in many ways. I read a great many books simply because that is my vocation now that I've retired, and most of those many can simply be cast aside once I've done. This book is one of the rare exceptions. It should be added to the repertoire of any teacher of modern literature--and indeed, could do much to augment a sociology or modern history class.
The prose is amazingly well done, with descriptions of se...more
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Carolyn
I picked this novel when I was in Juneau many moons ago. I remember being curled up with it while sitting in a cabin in the wilds of Admiralty Is. Alaska...A wonderful setting to become lost in a wonderful story. Guterson's vivid, descriptive language captures the sensuous, moody beauty of the Pacific Northwest. Against this beautiful, lush back drop you are drawn into a painful story of injustice, war, love, loss and bitterness.

The book with its movement back and forth in time draws you in...more
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Lydia
10/29/07

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in October, 2007
Not a bad story, as stories go. (Yes, I saw the film years ago when it came out, so no surprises there.)

The plot was intricately laid out, with interestingly paced (albeit unbalanced) back flashes, and the sensory descriptions painted lovely images of a Northwest landscape. Yet as they say, a picture paints a thousand words, but this book seems to have that a little backwards... In fact, I found the book to be laden with detail at the expense of my expectations for something a little more ch...more