The fire line The story of the Granite Mountain Hotshots and one of the deadliest days in American firefighting

Fernanda Santos

Book - 2016

"Draws on hundreds of hours of interviews with family members, colleagues, historians and other insiders to trace the stories and heroic sacrifices of the elite Granite Mountain Hotshots who gave their lives fighting the catastrophic 2013 wildfire in Yarnell, Arizona,"--NoveList.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Flatiron Books 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Fernanda Santos (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 273 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-263) and index.
ISBN
9781250054029
  • Prologue
  • Part I.
  • The Guys
  • Saving a Tree
  • A Bolt of Lightning
  • Calculating Risk
  • A Sleeping Fire Awakens
  • Promises and Goodbyes
  • Part II.
  • A Treacherous Combination
  • Trouble in the Sky
  • Change in the Winds
  • No Answer
  • Gone
  • Two Thousand Degrees
  • Coining Home
  • "We Take Care of Our Own"
  • An End, and New Beginnings
  • Author's Note
  • Acknowledgments
  • Chronology
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Deaths of forest firefighters have generated a popular, if grim, literature: Young Men and Fire by Norman Maclean (1992) and Fire on the Mountain by John Maclean (1999) are prominent examples. Santos' contribution to the genre concerns the June 2013 disaster in Arizona, which she covered for the New York Times. Gleaning personal details from in-depth interviews with family and friends of the 19 men who died, she strives to capture their temperaments and what led them to become wilderness firefighters. The occupation is prized; entry is competitive, and the work is demanding. Named the Granite Mountain Hotshots, they were summoned to battle a fire near Prescott, Arizona. In her fine-grained style, Santos portentously documents their activities the night before they marched into action. Switching to the enemy, Santos explains forest-fire behavior, accelerating the drama by tracking that particular blaze. The disaster unfolded quickly: sensing danger, leader Eric Marsh guided his men away from the flames, but the inferno trapped them within an hour. A conscientious and complete researcher, Santos will leave readers awed, somber, and moved.--Taylor, Gilbert Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

New York Times Phoenix bureau chief Santos looks into a lightning-caused blaze that killed 19 Arizona firefighters in the summer of 2013. Early on in her first book, the author notes that while the fire itself was the agent of death, it was a string of miscommunications and guessworkpreventable but, in retrospect, seemingly inevitable human errorthat sent the Granite Mountain Hotshots to their doom. Determining responsibility for those miscommunications and the poor judgment that resulted has riven the city of Prescott, the Hotshots' home, and especially its politicians. When considering whether to disband the elite unit, "the only one to have a city as its employer, and only one of two to operate under the auspices of a structural fire department," city officials had to wrestle more with questions of money and liability than they did the rightness or the necessity of keeping such a team on the books. (There was talk, Santos writes, of privatizing the venture, an idea that is still current.) The events of the fire were well-covered in the national media, in part by this author. Less well known are some of these post-mortem matters, her coverage of which makes a valuable contribution to the literature of disaster preparedness and managementand given that wildfire is a growing problem in the ever more arid West, that literature needs all the good work it can get. As a narrative, though, the book is less satisfying; the prose is flat, and it has all the hallmarks of a stretched-out newspaper story, with the usual clichs, set pieces, and stock descriptions: "Christopher MacKenzie, thirty, was single and a bit of a Don Juan, with a huge shoe collection, entering his ninth fire season"; "Doppler radars look like giant golf balls perched atop squat buildings or steel towers"; "Those were the ingredients for the disaster that was about to unfold." It's no Young Men and Fire, but Santos provides a good summary of terrible events and their aftermath. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.