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Yellow Light asks forty world-renowned and newly emerging artists such as novelists C. Y. Lee and Maxine Hong Kingston: playwright David Henry Hwang and filmmaker Christine Choy: and hip hop and rap artists Jamez Chang and Tou Ger Xiong about their sense of an Asian American identity, their intended audience, and the genesis and purpose of their creative works. Providing interviews, photos, short biographies, personal essays, and artistic samples-including works of fiction and poetry, plays, visual art, and music-for each contributor, Yellow Light is the first book to present the words behind the words, images, and sounds of Asian American cultural production.
On a search for cows, Hawaiian realtor Jazz Little finds herself a cowboy instead. Rancher Kimo McGinnis is astounded when the petite, copper-haired beauty insists that his steers belong on her company's newly acquired property. Kimo is tall, handsome, and the kind of charmer most women dream of, and Jazz is not immune to his appeal. But he's also a rodeo cowboy. To Jazz, whose brother was hurt in a rodeo event years ago, Kimo spells Danger with a capital D. Kimo is equally smitten with the independent, strong-minded Jazz, but he needs a woman who can accept his rough-and-tumble life on the ranch and rodeo circuit. Will city girl Jazz learn to conquer her fears to find the love she's always wanted? Will stubborn cowboy Kimo accept compromise in his life in the rodeo?
Can a Manoa girl find happiness with a Waimanalo cowboy and remain a part of her singing group, Kaleidoscope?
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Tuesdays at Two is an eclectic mix of laughs, tears, fears and smiles conjured up by the Waikiki Writers Group. Personal memoir and innovative fiction are served up against Hawaiian and non-Hawaiian backdrops.