This enriching, complex family saga and interracial drama brims with beautiful prose. It begins one summer on Bowen Island during the Depression and moves through Pearl Harbour and the evacuation of the Japanese and into the 1970s. Gwen Killam is a child on Bowen whose idyllic summers are obliterated by the outbreak of the war. Her swimming teacher, Takumi Yoshito, disappears along with his parents who are famous for their devotion to the Bowen Inn gardens. The Lower Mainland is in blackout, and so is the future of Gwen’s beloved Aunt Isabelle who must make an unthinkable sacrifice. The Bowen Island dancehall is well-known during the war as a moonlight cruise destination and it becomes an emotional landmark for time passing and remembered. Brilliantly crafted, The Dancehall Years is a literary gem.
just so you know... I do not own a kindle, and I certainly didnt read this in a kindle edition. somehow, its the only option today it seems, even tho it invites me to change it NB at last I have fixed this and hopefully it will stay fixed.
This is historical fiction of the most verifiable order, concerning events that occurred within the lifetime of some who are still living, and in a place I know and love.
JH has brought alive the story of the Canadian maltreatment of the Japanese forced from their homes during world war II. Cleverly and fluidly written, it is no way a diatribe but a pensive exploration of the impact of ignorance and unlikely connections.
Haggerty’s prose ranges from lush and entrancing to terse and compelling, swooping from grand descriptions of the towering landscape to the minutiae of intimate relationships and interactions.
I loved the first part of this book and was sure I’d give it five stars for the beautiful writing and its sense of place and time. However I got bogged down by part three when it completely becomes Gwen’s story. Although Gwen’s is the first voice in the novel, the first section is really Isabelle and Takumi’s story, and their story has such resonance that I wanted it to remain central. It’s the universal dreadful story of how neighbours can turn on neighbours, when encouraged to do so by their leaders - very much the case with Japanese Canadians during WWII. Perhaps if the dynamics of Gwen’s own childhood had been made more obvious, I would have understood her fragility better - but her parents, Percy and Ada, were always opaque to me, so that Ada’s sudden transformation into a brave woman who’d overcome her fear of flying for the sake of her husband seemed utterly false. The last section does satisfactorily pull all the threads of the novel back together again, for which I was grateful. And overall I’m very glad I read this novel, so my criticisms need to be read as disappointment that an outstanding book wasn’t quite what it could have been.
Sad saga of generations living, loving, learning, and loss on Bowen Island, Vancouver and northern & southern areas of North America's West Coast. Ending left me not understanding it, but otherwise the story kept me engaged.
I have been mulling over my thoughts on this book over the past couple of days, as it is a fluid family saga. The writing is beautiful and I loved reading a story where I am very familiar with the setting.