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Books on Personal
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"Nation Within is a refreshing new look at a Hawai‘i known to most Americans
for Pearl Harbor and beautiful beaches. This book gives us the untold story, the
history we were not given in school, placing Hawai‘i inside the larger picture of
U.S. expansion into the Pacific. What we learn is sobering, and fascinating."
—Howard Zinn, author of A People’s History of the United States
"This book raises important and still unresolved issues about the annexation of
Hawai‘i by the United States, explaining that the U.S. Senate would not approve
the proposed treaty of annexation, that virtually all Native Hawaiians opposed
annexation, and that the ultimate procedure used—a joint resolution passed by
a simple majority of both chambers of Congress—was controversial at the time
and was questioned by constitutional scholars in the decades that followed.
Nation Within is much livelier than the usual history book, but also much more
detailed, carefully researched, and thoughtful than most journalism."
—Jon M. Van Dyke, Professor of Constitutional Law, University of Hawai‘i, author of
Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawai’i?
"No one has taken the time to explicitly search out the relationships between
and among Americans who stole our independence with as much tenaciousness
and perspicacity as Nation Within. Even better is [Tom Coffman’s] exemplary
analysis of how the Japanese threat to the Islands was essentially created by
confused and greed-inspired policies in the republic and outright deception
at the U.S. State Department level. But what I found most valuable about this
work was his portrayal of the republic as an opportunistic masquerade of
democratic ideals that swindled an entire nation of its inheritance. In no other
history that I’ve seen is the cynical and manipulative nature of annexation so
clearly displayed. His ironic recounting of how voting under the republic was
to be constructed in such a way as to adopt all of the finest traditions of the
Jim Crow South tells us all we need to know about the nature of the government
that surrendered the nation of Hawai‘i to the United States. ... [Coffman’s]
analysis of Lili‘uokalani’s leadership is sensitive and perceptive. ... To this
date I have not seen a more believable analysis of the queen’s leadership,
nor a more compelling analysis of the failure of President Cleveland’s leadership
in the end."
—Jon Kamakawiwo‘ole Osorio, author of Dismembering Lahui: A History of the
Hawaiian Nation to 1887, Professor of Hawaiian Studies, University of Hawai‘i at
Mānoa, from The Hawaiian Journal of History
"The story of how Hawai‘i lost its independence and was annexed to the United
States is as fascinating and important as it is unknown. Nation Within is a
passionate and deeply researched account of this tragedy. It is essential reading
for anyone who wants to understand how the U.S. became what it is today."
— Stephen Kinzer, author of Overthrow: America’s Century of Regime Change from
Hawaii to Iraq
"As a historian, Tom has done a tremendous job in revealing the events and
circumstances that led to the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom
government in 1893. More importantly, however, he unveils how the Queen and
Hawaiian subjects were politically and legally astute and were able to organize
themselves, in the aftermath of the overthrow, into a formidable political force
that prevented the annexation of the country by treaty. While they succeeded in
preventing the U.S. Senate from ratifying two attempts to annex the country by
treaty, they were unable to prevent the U.S. Congress from unilaterally enacting
a joint resolution of annexation (in the heat of the Spanish-American War)
that served as the basis to illegally seize and occupy the nation of Hawai‘i for
military purposes—an occupation that is now over a century long."
— Keanu Sai, Political Scientist
"A far-reaching treasure hunt for long-buried facts, revealing for the first time
the full array of events and shifting international forces that led to the overthrow
and annexation of the Kingdom of Hawai‘i. ... [N]ot to be missed."
— Herb Kawainui Kane, artist/historian, author of Ancient Hawai‘i
"Tom Coffman has gracefully constructed a new vision of Hawaiian history,
broader perhaps than any produced in the last 100 years. ... A stunning, trans-
oceanic story."
— Kehaulani Lum, Honolulu Star-Bulletin
"... a page-turner—and an eye-opener."
— Honolulu weekly
"Written with power and clarity, Nation Within narrates a history of dispossession
but also of complicity and resistance. It correctly situates Hawai‘i’s annexation
within the global context of U.S. imperialism; it insightfully points out that the
nation was never completely extinguished because Hawai‘i continues to stir
within the hearts of the Hawaiian people."
— Gary Y. Okihiro, Professor of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University,
author of Island World: A History of Hawai‘i and the United States
"Nation Within is the most original and best researched account I know on the
U.S. annexation of Hawaii—and the Hawaiians’ opposition, then and now,
to that annexation. The story is compelling for many reasons, not least the
Hawaiians’ trust that the American democratic process would protect their
independence and their lands."
— Walter LaFeber, Cornell University, author of The New Empire : An Interpretation of
American Expansion, 1860-1898
"All Americans who wish to understand how and why the United States
annexed Hawai‘i in 1898 should read this book. Tom Coffman has forever
dispelled the commonly held belief that annexation was a benign and inevitable
process of self-determination. Readers of Nation Within also will come to
understand why Native Hawaiians today seek justice and reconciliation from
an American government that usurped and destroyed their national sovereignty
a century ago."
— Edward P. Crapol, Professor of History, College of William and Mary
"Nation Within explores those ‘strange five years’ from 1893-1898 during which
a cabal of ‘missionary boys’ hijacked a sovereign nation, deposed its monarch,
prostituted the words ‘republic’ and ‘democracy’ as badly as any Third World
Communist dictator ever has, and handed over an unwilling native people to
the care and keeping of the breast-beating, muscle-flexing expansionist United
States. (And if you think I overwrite, then I challenge you to read the book.) ...
weep, grow angry ... "
— Dan Boylan, Professor of History, University of Hawai‘i, MidWeek
"By far the best account of the long subversion and eventual destruction of the
independent kingdom of Hawaii by American businessmen and politicians is
Tom Coffman’s Nation Within, now available in this new edition. Annexation
was the consequence of great historical forces including capitalism, imperialism,
expansionism, and militarism but it was also the consequence of the actions
and inactions of a great assortment of historical actors in both Honolulu and
Washington, D.C., who rise up out of these pages so vividly—villains and
heroes alike—that it is as if it is all just now happening for the first time. The
portrait of Queen Lili‘uokalani bravely defending her country in the cold,
wintry U.S. capital four years after her overthrow is unforgettably poignant
and should dispel for all time the lie of Hawaiians’ willing complicity in the
fate that overtook them. A master both of narrative and explanation, Coffman
ties together human motives and political strategies in an unusually clear and
persuasive way. By giving the Hawaiians’ resistance to domination a past, he
also helps give it a future. He makes Hawaiian history make sense."
— Elinor Langer, author of "Famous are the Flowers: Hawaiian Resistance Then—
And Now," Special Issue of The Nation, April 28, 2008
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