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Students working in the grass
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Students working in the grass
Students working on the P¨¡lamanui Forest Preserve (Photo courtesy: Richard Stevens)

For more than three decades, Richard Stevens has been an educator, mentor and environmental steward, inspiring generations of students at .

person next to plant
Stevens with Hawaiian trees (Photo courtesy: Richard Stevens)

Now, the beloved professor is sharing the deeply personal tales that shaped his life in his new book, Storyland.

The memoir traces his extraordinary journey from the battlefields of the Vietnam War to the ancient trails of Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Island¡ªa path of healing and discovery heavily influenced by his transformative experiences within the University of Âé¶¹´«Ã½.

Life-changing transformation

Storyland book cover featuring a bird

Stevens, a former U.S. Marine, credits his time at UH with helping him pivot from the harsh realities of combat to a life dedicated to peace and cultural preservation. After returning from Vietnam and moving in with a Native Hawaiian family who embraced him as their “haole boy,” Stevens eventually pursued master’s and doctorate degrees in history at UH ²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹. This educational journey offered him a new, profound purpose.

“It completely changed the direction of my life,” Stevens said of his connection to the university. “From being just out of the Marines and now embarked on really a life of peace and nature.”

Mission of harmony and healing

Since teaching his first class at Âé¶¹´«Ã½ CC in 1988, Stevens has educated more than 7,000 students. In his classroom, he seamlessly intertwines historical lessons with vivid personal anecdotes—affectionately called “storylands”—which ultimately laid the foundation for his new book.

black and white photo of a person
Stevens in Vietnam (Photo courtesy: Richard Stevens)

The university has also inspired previous books. Years ago, after sharing with students in P¨¡lamanui about his Vietnam experiences, a student encouraged and supported him to go back and find a Vietnamese woman warrior who had been captured and interrogated. That journey was relayed in his book Trail to Redemption: Love and War in Vietnam.

“It’s an example of the university and my association with the university playing these huge roles in my life, even giving me a mission,” Stevens said. “I would say that mission is a double one of peace and nature healing, and then giving me the opportunity to talk about it to eager listeners and then to engage those eager listeners in doing things. That has been a glorious part of this whole story of my life.”

Stevens’ impact extends far beyond the classroom walls. He and his students actively restore the island’s natural landscapes, planting thousands of native trees and caring for a 909-acre lowland dry forest preserve adjacent to the P¨¡lamanui campus. Stevens invites his students to dedicate their planted trees to beloved family members, creating what he calls a “Forest of Loved Souls.”

Motivation to find your path

Through Storyland, Stevens hopes to inspire his readers. He invites them to reconsider the impact of their own personal history. The book is not only a testament to resilience and the healing power of storytelling, but also a call for students to discover their own purpose.

“Understanding what you are looking for is helpful but not required. All that’s necessary is the motivation to find your path,” Stevens said, sharing a quote entered in his classes¡¯ “Quote Contests.”

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