Maui and his mother Hina stand at the heart of Polynesian imagination. Maui shapes islands and stories. In D. Westervelt's lucid retelling, a Polynesian mythology collection unfolds: retold traditional stories that balance reverence with readability. This Hawaiian legends anthology gathers classic folklore stories and mother goddess narratives alongside the demi-god myths and tales that have echoed across ocean and reef. Westervelt presents ancient oceanic folklore with careful attention to tone and provenance, rendering the material accessible to newcomers while preserving the rhythms of oral transmission. The language is plain yet evocative, a rare blend that keeps the narratives immediate without modernising them into flat paraphrase. Framed by the cultural moment of nineteenth century Hawaii, these accounts carry historical resonance as one of the earlier English-language compilations to introduce Pacific voices to a wider readership; they belong among the broader corpus of pacific islands legends and resonate with themes familiar from maori and samoan myths. For casual readers there is vivid spectacle and moral wit; for classic-literature collectors the volume offers provenance and a window into how Western audiences first encountered these tales. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure. Practical as mythology for young readers and as a multicultural classroom resource, this edition is equally at home on the family bookshelf and the scholar's shelf. Essential reading for anyone drawn to the sweep of ancient oceanic folklore and the enduring charm of classic folklore stories. Teachers and librarians will recognise its usefulness as a multicultural classroom resource, and families may find it an approachable form of mythology for young readers. Scholars and collectors, meanwhile, can trace the echoes of these retold traditional stories through wider comparative work on maori and samoan myths and Pacific narrative forms. With both immediacy and archival value, it invites repeated reading and thoughtful study.