Wild Fires
by Sophie Jai
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Pub Date May 12 2022 | Archive Date May 30 2023
HarperCollins UK, HarperFiction | The Borough Press
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Description
*WINNER OF THE 2023 FRED KERNER BOOK AWARD FOR FICTION*
*LONGLISTED FOR THE 2023 TORONTO BOOK AWARDS*
*FINALIST FOR THE 2023 RAKUTEN KOBO EMERGING WRITER PRIZE*
Grief is like an inside joke: you have to have been there to really get it.
Everything Cassandra Rampersad knows about her family history has been overheard: whispered behind a closed door or written in a notebook stowed away. Cassandra has always been curious, and when a death in the family means she has to return home to Toronto, it seems like the perfect opportunity to finally discover what it is that no one else will talk about.
But uncovering the past will never be easy when it has stayed hidden for so long. And with every new revelation, Cassandra realises that there is a reason that her family has never been good at grieving…
A powerful meditation on memory and loss, Wild Fires is a beautifully crafted novel from a stunning new literary voice.
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9780008380359 |
PRICE | $11.99 (USD) |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
Wild Fires is about grief, loss, and generational trauma. It's beautifully written and just so incredibly well-crafted--there were some very hard-hitting lines that made me put the book down and just sit in it for a moment.
I normally struggle with keeping characters straight in my mind (when I saw the family tree at the beginning I was like, "oh no, I am going to have to flip back to this constantly because no way will I remember"). However, the characterization, pacing, and structure of Wild Fires is so well-done I really didn't have all that difficulty. I even remember all the character's names (a big win for me) because all of the family members were so well-realized. This genuinely reads like a non-fiction biography because the characters feel like people. I just. Ugh. It's so good.
And the prose? My brain is fried right now because end of term is coming up so I can't quite summarize the words to say how fucking good it is. Just. *chefs kiss*
It is a very sad, sometimes difficult book to get through. Because it does tackle grief and loss--not just when it comes to death, but when it comes to losing family members in other ways, along with losing family history and the damage trauma can cause to relationships.
The only criticism I would say is that there are two plot threads I was interested in that I wish we'd seen more of (Onion's character and the relationship between the main character and her roommate). Those two things not being there isn't a huge issue, just some aspects of the story that were interesting I would have liked to see developed/added in more.
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