Readers of "The Gift of Rain," Tan Twan Eng's sweeping debut novel about the Japanese occupation of Malaya during World War II, may be reminded of the debate over free will and predestination in "Lawrence of Arabia" that neatly divides that film into halves: optimistic and somber.
To attack the port of Aqaba from its undefended rear, Lawrence's army circles through the desert. A soldier is lost in a sandstorm and Lawrence goes back for him, despite his Arab allies' insistence that the man's death from heat and thirst has already been "written."
Lawrence rescues the man and proclaims in the name of the rationalistic, self-willed West, "Nothing is written." But when Aqaba is captured, the man is arrested for looting, and Lawrence has to shoot him. So was his death fated after all?
Tan's protagonist, Philip Hutton, seems freer than most to choose his destiny when, in 1939, at the age of 16, he meets Hayato Endo. Hutton is the son of a wealthy British trader on the island of Penang -- off the west coast of Malaya -- and the trader's Chinese second wife.
Steeped in two cultures but at home in neither, alienated from both sides of his family, he is fully accepted only by Endo, a Japanese diplomat who rents a small neighboring island from Hutton's father.
Endo teaches the boy aikido and becomes his beloved sensei, to whom, in the tradition of Asian martial arts, absolute loyalty is due.
Hutton is happy to guide Endo on tours of Penang and the Malayan mainland. When war breaks out, however, and Endo becomes second-in-command of the Japanese forces that occupy Penang, Hutton realizes that his mentor also was a spy. Inadvertently, he has helped bring destruction on his country and his family.
Endo, sincere in his way, believes in reincarnation. In his view, he and Hutton have been tragically linked for centuries, in life after life.
All he can do in this life is, through aikido, give the boy some tools to cope with his fate.
Nonetheless, for Hutton the war years are a torment. He collaborates with the Japanese in a vain attempt to protect his family; this means he must witness and even participate in atrocities.
To save his sanity and his soul, he plays a double game, warning local resistance fighters and saving lives when he can. He is widely hated and trusted by no one.