Going ‘ Off The Grid’ in Rural Hawaii

  • Book: Off the Grid
  • Location: Wyoming
  • Author: C J Box

Review Author: thefictionaddiction

Location

Content

In the Hawaiian mystery novel Off The Grid, an abandoned rural area in the shadow of a volcano makes a perfect place for quietly living secretive, off-the-grid lives. When two people are killed, in unrelated but almost simultaneous murders, detective Koa Kane investigates, and ends up uncovering secrets that span continents and decades.

The author brings the off-grid, undocumented Hawaiian perma-camps to life. When I was in Waianae, I saw a lot of people camping permanently on the beach. In the novel, certain residents pay cash for anything needed and squat in the jungle, and live without a lot of modern conveniences.

Waianae also has a beautiful heiau, a religious place for the ancient Hawaiians. I don’t know too much about early Hawaiian religion, I was just moved by the beauty of this spot, so in the book, when the investigators had to search a heiau, I was really anxious that they’d desecrate or ruin it. That’s how well the author brings the setting to life!

I also loved the incompetent medical examiner, a fairly minor but way too realistic character. Haven’t we all had a colleague who was completely unhelpful and almost entirely useless, but somehow just barely good enough to keep their job? Aaaah, I really felt for poor Koa here.

Unfortunately, I found the women characters slightly flat. Beautiful, successful, loving girlfriend Nalani is a bit too perfect to be relatable, while another character is a fairly one-note Rejected Ugly Woman. I hope this is just a function of how many characters Koa meets in this investigation, and that future Koa Kane novels will develop women characters further. (Also, an attractive, stylish, well-groomed woman nursing a secret crush would be more of revelation than discovering that the woman described as aging poorly, wearing too much makeup, unattractive in so many ways, etc., is desperately lonely and loveless.)

Overall, it’s a well-plotted mystery with a wide cast of characters and far-reaching connections, with just enough departmental politics to keep Koa feeling like a real person doing a real job.

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