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โGrossman balances the social and political, the emotional and physical, with insight and precision. Her disparate characters all hail from different worlds, and itโs a horrific thrill to witness their dramas unfurl and collide.""โNew York Times Book Review
With the emotional echoes ofย Little Fires Everywhereย and the lush atmosphere ofย Disappearing Earth, a riveting debut novel in which a wildfire creeps toward Berkeley, California, igniting tensions as characters from all walks of life confront the injustices lying beneath the cityโs surface.
As a wildfire threatens Berkeley, the cityโs inhabitants are forced to reckon with the cracks in the lives they've built.
Abigail, a wealthy homeowner, decides to throw a lavish birthday in a hillside mansion to raise money for the cityโs newest affordable housing projectโand prove to her family that sheโs made something worthwhile of her life. Sunny, a construction worker who sleeps in a van along the bayโs shore, is in the running for an apartmentโbut only if enough funds are raised at the party.
As the heat and smoke from the approaching blaze descend upon the town, tensions rise and residentsโyoung and old, haves and have notsโconfront the inequities laid bare, and the fragility of building a life in a world on fire.
Alternating among a colorful cast of characters,ย A Fire So Wildย is a timely, tautly paced novel that questions why when everything burns, not everyone is left with scars.
Sarah S. Grossman is a writer and former reporter at HuffPost, where she covered the climate crisis and other social justice issues. She lives in California with her husband and their pit bull.