HEALING WATER: DISEASE, POLITICS, COMPASSION

HEALING WATER a story of disease and compassion

Fact is sometimes stranger than fiction. The combination of historical facts plus a riveting story can be an unforgettable way to read about and relate to history. Joyce Moyer Hostetter successfully does just this, spins a story around a place, person, and situation. In the historical novel, HEALING WATER, the situation is the dreaded terminal disease of leprosy. When thirteen-year-old Pia is diagnosed with having leprosy, this means, not only eventual death, but immediate separation from his family and home and then being shipped by boat to the desolate island of Molokai – shipped there to die. healing_water_8514-3-200x300      

Think Hawaii and one can imagine hearing the whoosh of surf and being surrounded by a lush landscape of tropical blossoms and coconut palms or strolling along a white-sand beach. Hawaii during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (1866-1969) could also mean a place of disease and despair: leprosy. The Hawaiian island of Molokai is the setting for HEALING WATER and the terminal disease of leprosy is the reality faced by the story’s main character.

Other remarkable historical novels by Joyce Moyer Hostetter that combine fact and story are: BLUE, a story of family, friendship, polio and World War II and its sequel, COMFORT. All three books present history and story in a personal way that engage a reader, keeps one turning the pages, presents a day-to-day reality that becomes both meaningful and unforgettable. All three books cause us to reflect on how disease and healing often is a reflection of economics, social-cultural discrimination and racism. Even today!

Reviews of HEALING WATER

Fuse # 8 (Elizabeth Bird)

…it’s a relief to read a book as simultaneously engrossing and well researched as “Healing Water”. The kind of realistic fiction that’ll suck in the young readers the minute they start turning the pages.

Children’s Literature
This book is historical fiction about a leprosy colony on an isolated peninsula in Hawaii, not a joyful subject. Yet, Hostetter manages to write a story with heart, hope, and vigor, using a genuine voice. Contrary to my first impression of the topic, this is an uplifting book that tells of the miracle wrought through one man’s love of his fellow man. Hostetter ends with historical information about Father Damien’s life, leprosy, and the colony that benefited so much from his tender care.

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