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Snow Falling on Cedars

 David Guterson
 

Key Facts

 
full title  ·  Snow Falling on Cedars
 
author  ·  David Guterson
 
type of work  ·  Novel
 
genre  ·  Courtroom drama; historical novel; coming-of-age novel
 
language  ·  English
 
time and place written  ·  United States, 19841994
 
date of first publication  ·  1994
 
publisher  ·  Harcourt Brace and Company
 
narrator  ·  An anonymous third-person narrator
 
point of view  ·  The narrator speaks in the third person and is omniscient, able to see all of the action, both past and present, and aware of what is going on inside the minds of all the characters. The narrator alternates between a straightforward narrative of events and moments of subjective narration from within the minds of various characters.
 
tone  ·  The narrator's tone is serious and distant, though at times sympathetic to the characters.
 
tense  ·  Past, with flashbacks between the trial (December 1954) and various earlier events and interactions
 
setting (time)  ·  December 1954, with flashbacks
 
setting (place)  ·  San Piedro, a fictional island in Puget Sound, Washington; flashbacks include scenes in Seattle, Montana, California, Japan, the Tarawa Atoll in the South Pacific, and other places
 
protagonist  ·  Ishmael Chambers
 
major conflict  ·  Kabuo Miyamoto stands trial for the murder of Carl Heine, while Ishmael Chambers struggles to overcome his emotionally and physically shattered past.
 
rising action  ·  Kabuo's arrest for murder; Hatsue's request for Ishmael's help; Ishmael's bitterness about Hatsue's rejection of him
 
climax  · Ishmael's discovery, in Chapter 23, of evidence proving Kabuo's innocence brings Ishmael's conflicting desires to hurt and help Hatsue to a breaking point.
 
falling action  ·  Ishmael's rereading of Hatsue's letter as he sits in his father's study; Ishmael's decision to help Hatsue by coming forward with the evidence that exonerates Kabuo; Judge Fielding's dismissal of the charges against Kabuo
 
themes  ·  The struggle between free will and chance; the cyclical nature of prejudice; the limits of knowledge
 
motifs  ·  The storm; the body; testimony
 
symbols  ·  The cedar tree; Arthur Chambers's chair; the courthouse; Ishmael's camera
 
foreshadowing  ·  The snowstorm brewing outside the courthouse at the beginning of the trial hints at the impersonal forces, such as prejudice, that will be at work during the trial. Arthur Chambers's question to Ishmael about which facts the newspaper should print hints at the unreliability of people's perceptions of the truth.
 
 
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