"At this turn-of-millennium moment, the politics of representing Hawaii are more acute than ever, with a tourist market heated by global capital and a movement for native Hawaiian sovereignty fueled by growing awareness of the plight of indigenous peoples worldwide. Amidst all of this Karen Ito offers up a uniquely fresh perspective on issues of Hawaiian culture and identity. She does this by listening closely to the words of her urban 'lady friends' and in so doing provides a glimpse of the ordinary lives of Hawaiians who neither live on 'the land' nor engage in political activism. As these women discuss their interpersonal lives, invoking distinct images and ways of talking, one can begin to understand the streams of continuity in everyday social life that, despite centuries of colonial suppression and loss, provide a strong basis for today's ongoing cultural resurgence."