FIVE YEARS ON A ROCK is an amazing story of strength, personal honor and the rugged ability to continue on in the life you are handed. In 1915 Sawa Oyama obediently leaves Japan for Hawaii as a picture bride. She plans in her hopeful heart to return in five years to her home. But a picture bride is only romantic in fairytales and young girls dreams, the reality of such a life is more often dissapointment and grim endurance. Milton Murayma tells the story of his mother and the other remarkable Japanese women who went to Hawaii as brides and never went home again. They mananaged against incredible odds to be the dutiful wives and daughters that their own parents had raised them to be. They married men they didn’t know to relieve the financial burdens of their own families in Japan. They raised children, cared for their husbands, and their husbands’ families. And they worked and worked to make a better life possible and to overcome obstacles of poverty and loveless marriages. They never gave up the hope that it could be better.
This is a fabulous book not to be missed. The strength of Sawa Oyama is amazing and beautiful.
Milton Murayma is the author of a previous novel about the Oyama family life in Hawaii titled All I Asking for is My Body published in 1975 (I haven’t read it but it’s on my book list). Mr. Murayma was born on Maui and grew up in Lahina and in the nearby plantation camp of Puukolii. In addition to his two novels, he is the author of several plays, notably a historical drama, Yoshitsune.
