Women's Biography, Polynesia - History, Australian & Oceanic Studies, Melanesia - History, Women's Biography
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Overview
In search of a new life and new horizons, fifty-four-year-old Joana McIntyre uproots her life as a Hawaiian outisland harbormaster to pursue her dream of a tropical paradise. Here two-week vacation becomes a courageous journey of self-discovery as she meets, and eventually marries, MalΓ© Varawa, a dark, handsome Fijian fisherman nearly half her age; confronts the physical and emotional hardships of her new existence; struggles to bridges the barriers of age and cultural expectations; and learns to cross the channel between her desires and the reality of Fijian life.When life as a harbormaster in a Hawaiian out-island began to seem too civilized, the 54-year-old author moved to Fiji in search of adventure.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
The witty title says it all. This account, by a California-born environmentalist and anthropologist, of her exposure to life in Fiji by marriage to a Fijian fisherman is by turns touching, astonishing, amusing and deeply human. McIntyre, who as the book opens is acting as harbormaster on a Hawaiian island, with conventional dreams of a much more primitive tropical paradise, is a sometimes naive, often feisty woman with a poetic soul. Male Varawa is a physically splendid but emotionally childlike man half her age, deeply rooted in Fiji's ancient ways. Their meeting and eventual marriage was hardly idyllic. Male is a heavy imbiber of Fiji's intriguing yaqona , a drink men and women alike seem to lap up by the gallon, and given to fits of moody anger. McIntyre is frequently testy, as most Westerners would be, at the carelessness and indolence of so much of Fijian life. But she writes with such empathy about this oddly archaic society and her relation to it and with such lyrical fervor of natural splendors and horrors alike, that the book is utterly disarming. It would make a remarkable movie. Photos not seen by PW . (June)Library Journal
At the age of 54 Hawaiian harbormaster McIntryre (now Varawa) goes to Fiji seeking new adventure. Because of her interest in the real Fiji, she is invited to visit an outer island village, where she is courted by Male Varawa, a young, strong, and violent-tempered Fijian. They marry, and then she begins the long, slow, and difficult adaptation to Fijian life. She must adjust her whole way of thinking in order to understand and fit into her Fijian family. During this time she maintains her sanity by keeping extensive journals on everyday events and her own thoughts and feelings. These journals form the basis of her book, which gives insight into Fijian life and problems of cultural change. Varawa (McIntyre) is also the author of The Delicate Art of Whale Watching (LJ 11/15/82). Recommended for public libraries.-- Judith Nixon, Purdue Univ. Lib., W. Lafayette, Ind.Book Details
Published
June 1, 1990
Publisher
HarperPerennial
Pages
304
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780060973193