Hawaii is a novel by
James Michener. Written in episodic format like many of Michener's works, the book narrates the story of the
original Hawaiians who sailed to the islands from
Bora Bora, the early
American missionaries (in this case, Calvinist missionaries) and merchants, and the
Chinese and
Japanese immigrants who traveled to work and seek their fortunes in
Hawaii. The story begins with the creation of the islands themselves at the dawn of time and ends in the mid-1950s. Each section explores the experiences of different groups of arrivals. The point of view changes with each chapter, although as the novel nears its end, these points-of-view change and coalesce rapidly culminating with the "Golden Man", who Michener describes as racially and culturally the result of the millennia of immigration to the islands.