On San Piedro, an island of rugged, spectacular beauty in Puget Sound, a Japanese-American fisherman stands trial, charged with cold-blooded murder. It is 1954, and the shadow of World War II, with its brutality abroad and internment of Japanese Americans at home, hangs over the courtroom.
Ishmael Chambers, who lost as arm in the Pacific War and now runs the island newspaper inherited from his father, is among the journalists covering the trial-a trial that brings him close, once again, to Hatsue Miyamoto, the wife of the accused man and Ishamel's never-forgotten boyhood love. Hatsue and Ishmael, in the years before the war came between them, had dug clams together, picked strawberries in San Piedro's verdant fields, and passed long hours in the secrecy of a giant hollow cedar tree.
Now, as a heavy snowfall surrounds and impedes the progress of Kabuo Miyamoto's trial, they and the other participants must come to a reckoning with the past, with culture, nature, and love, and with the possibilities of human will. Both suspenseful and beautifully crafted, Snow Falling on Cedars portrays the psychology of a community, the ambiguities of justice, the racism that persists even between neighbours, and the necessity of individual moral action despite the indifference of nature and circumstance.