Daughters of Fire

Regular price €19.99
Quantity:
Ships in 10-20 days
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Shipping & Delivery
A01=Tom Peek
A12=John D. Dawson
Action
activist fiction
adventure
adventure novel
Author_John D. Dawson
Author_Tom Peek
Big Island
Category=FBA
Category=FF
Category=FJ
Category=FR
Category=FT
Colonization
contemporary thriller
Crime
cultural tension
Environment
eq_bestseller
eq_crime
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_modern-contemporary
eq_nobargain
eq_romance
Fairy TaleFantasy
Female protagonist
Folklore
Gods & Goddesses
Hawaii
Hawaiian culture
Herb Kane
indigenous rights
Interracial romance
John D Dawson
Kilauea
Mauna Kea
Mauna Loa
Metaphysical
Murder
mystery
Mythology and Folk Tales
Native Hawaiian culture
Nature
Organized crime
Political corruption
Politics
Polynesian mythology
romance and mystery
Social justice
Spiritual
sustainable tourism
Tom Peek
volcanoes

Product details

  • ISBN 9781632261564
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: Easton Studio Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

Daughters of Fire is a gripping adventure of romance, intrigue, myth, and murder set amid the cultural tensions of today’s Hawaiʻi.


Winner of the Independent Book Publishers Association Benjamin Franklin Silver Finalist Award for Popular Fiction


A visiting astronomer falls in love with a Hawaiian anthropologist who guides him into a Polynesian world of volcanoes, gods, and revered ancestors. The lovers get caught up in murder and intrigue as developers and politicians try to conceal that a long-dormant volcano is rumbling back to life above the hotel-laden Kona coast. The anthropologist joins forces with an aging seer and a young activist, and these three Hawaiian women summon their deepest traditions to confront the latest, most extravagant resort as the eruption and the murder expose deep rifts in paradise.


Tom Peek’s mystical and provocative novel picks up Hawaiʻi’s story where James Michener left off. Daughters of Fire illuminates how the islands’ post-statehood transformation into a tourist mecca and developers gold mine sparked a Native Hawaiian movement to reclaim their culture, protect sacred land, and step into the future with wisdom and aloha.


Includes an illustrated map and 9 original pen-and-ink drawings created for the novel by John D. Dawson. Also includes a Reading Group Guide. 


Originally published in 2012, Daughters of Fire has become a classic of modern Hawaiian fiction. This edition includes a new introduction by the author.

Tom Peek lived his early life on the Upper Mississippi on a backwaters island of Minnesota river folk, beaver, and ancient burial mounds. After hitchhiking by boat through the South Seas, he settled on Hawaiʻi Island more than three decades ago. There, he’s been a mountain and astronomy guide on Mauna Kea and an eruption ranger, firefighter, and exhibit writer on Kilauea, working closely with Hawaiian elders and cultural practitioners on both volcanoes. A nationally award-winning author and acclaimed writing teacher, he lives with his wife, artist Catherine Robbins, in a rainforest cottage near Kilauea’s erupting summit. John D. Dawson was raised in San Diego and has lived on Hawaiʻi Island for decades. A graduate of the Art Center School, Los Angeles, now the ArtCenter College of Design, Dawson has illustrated books for national publishers as well as stamps for the US Postal Service, including its entire Nature of America series. He’s also done commissions for the United Nations, National Park Service, National Geographic Society, National Wildlife Federation, and Audubon Society. His fine art watercolors and acrylics are represented by the Volcano Art Center gallery in Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park. Herb Kawainui Kane, celebrated Hawaiian artist, historian, and author, cofounded the Polynesian Voyaging Society and designed the Hokulea voyaging canoe, contributing profoundly to the Hawaiian Renaissance movement. A graduate of the Art Institute of Chicago, Kane depicted Hawaiian historical scenes realistically, but when painting spiritual or mythological aspects of the culture—as in Pele, the cover image of this book—his art was expressionistic, with bold brushwork and vivid colors.

More from this author