profile

Legends of Lainjin

The Legend Is Born

Published over 1 year ago • 2 min read

[Following is an official OnlineBookClub.org review of "A Legend Is Born" by Gerald R Knight.]

by Bertha Jackson

A Legend Is Born: The Legends of Lainjin is the third book in this series by Gerald R. Knight. After Tarmālu leaves her infant son, Lainjin, with Helkena, a typhoon hits Wōtto and leaves the islanders without food, shelter, or water. Brothers, Japeba and Jipeba, arrive at the island to provide water and fresh tuna. Japeba is Lainjin's grandfather, and assuming that his daughter died during the typhoon, Jipeba asks Helkena to help raise Lainjin at their Namdik home. Helkena is excited to go with them because there will be many men on Namdik that she is not related to. One of the first men she sees is Ḷōjurok, and she is immediately attracted to him and imagines him as her chosen one. She is greatly disappointed to learn that Liargin has already chosen him. Will Helkena find a man who will want to leave Namdik and move to Wōtto? Read this fantastic book about the culture in the Marshall Islands to find out.

Gerald R. Knight did a fantastic job describing the pole houses, coral reefs, lagoons, islands, and oceans. I could easily visualize the wave swells rising over their canoes. Each of the characters in the book was easily identified, even though they had names that I was unfamiliar with. Each chapter's heading let me know what that chapter pertained to. I enjoyed learning about the islands' cultures. One example is how seashells play a dominant role in bathing. I learned eating fish helps to keep your body warm. Gerald R. Knight translated unfamiliar words the first time they were used, as well as in the footnotes at the end of each chapter and in the Glossary at the end of the book. Each footnote had a link to its reference that was easy to move back and forth from in the text. I appreciate that the chants were in italics which differentiated them from the rest of the text.

The sexual customs in the Marshall Islands could have left a little more to the imagination, but this is a personal preference and not a flaw in the book. With the easy access to translations of unfamiliar words, there was nothing I disliked about this book.

I am delighted to give this professionally edited book 4 out of 4 stars. With its smooth-flowing and fast-paced plot, there was no reason for me to give this book a lower score. I was intrigued from beginning to end and enjoyed reading this book.

Mature readers who enjoy romance or historical-fiction books based on the culture found on the Marshall Islands are the audience I recommend this book to. You do not need to read the first two books in the series to enjoy this one. If graphic sexual content offends you, you may want to avoid this book.

This e-book is free and can be downloaded at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B9ZR5N71

The Nook version can also be downloaded for free at: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-legend-is-born-gerald-r-knight/1142023180?ean=2940185654811

Legends of Lainjin

Read more from Legends of Lainjin

Reader The Fall of the Saudeleurs Post by Bertha Jackson The following is an official OnlineBookClub.org review of “The Fall of the Saudeleurs” by Gerald R Knight. The Fall of the Saudeleurs by Gerald R. Knight is Book Four in The Legends of Lainjin series. Ijokelekel’s mother had always told him he had a pali (teacher) named Pako that would teach him all he needed to know to survive. Once he found Pako, he was to give him a lime and tell him he was the son of Nahn Sapwe. Lañinpo tries to...

12 months ago • 2 min read

High on the shores of Boyowa, one of the Trobriand Islands, lies a heavy commemorative bronze plaque. It marks the spot, above a sandy beach, where a European dressed from head to foot in clean cotton whites and boots pitched his tent a respectful distance from the thatched house of the island chief over one hundred years ago. The plaque commemorates the life and writings of Bronisław Malinowski, who thus lived for a few years in stark contrast to the nearly naked islanders who went about,...

over 3 years ago • 7 min read
Share this post