Little fires everywhere

485 pages

English language

Published Aug. 8, 2017 by Random House Large Print.

ISBN:
978-0-525-49877-3
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
1002878147

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4 stars (17 reviews)

When a custody battle divides her placid town, straitlaced family woman Elena Richardson finds herself pitted against her enigmatic tenant and becomes obsessed with exposing her past, only to trigger devastating consequences for both families.

13 editions

Exhausting Descriptions

3 stars

The overall plot was very engaging and there are fantastic conflicts, even B and C line drama is captivating. However, I find the “big issue” introduced at the beginning of the story to be lackluster, there’s no real conclusion to anything (everything that was built was for nothing), and the third person omniscient narrator takes their job way too seriously. There are pages and pages and pages of unnecessary descriptions that were tedious to get through. I love information in books, I like learning things about characters, I love the big reveals, but these were so frequent and drawn out that I got bored in many places of the book.

Review of 'Little fires everywhere' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

It's hard to describe what this book is about. At the beginning you're dropped in dramatically, a family mansion is burning down, and we don't know what happened. But in flashbacks, we learn. It's a family drama story about a poor single mom, Mia, and her teenage daughter, living as tenants of the wealthy Richardson family in 'perfect' suburbia. But Mia has secrets from her past, and she soon clashes with Elena Richardson. It's predominantly a book about women. About growing up as a woman, motherhood, tough stuff like abortion, and the mean things women do to each other. Male characters play side-roles, but this book is really not about them. The writing is quite excellent, once it grabs you, there's no letting go. I enjoyed myself quite a bit.

Burning questions about motherhood

No rating

Exquisitely crafted tale that starts as dozens of smoldering embers that find enough oxygen to become a full on conflagration that burn to the nearly infinite possibilities of motherhood into the reader’s heart. I loved almost everything about this book, except Mrs Richardson, whose almost villainous role felt at time overly moralistic and flat. Highly recommend!

Review of 'Little Fires Everywhere' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

Ng does it again! I LOVED Everything I Never Told You because of the writing style, and this is no different. I feel like she stepped up her game as well. This story is not just about one family, but about a different set of families whose lives are intertwined, sometimes literally and sometimes thematically. One thing I love about her books is that she always manages to make me empathize with everyone in the story. She treats very complex issues with a lot of respect and nuance. There are no bad guys in her novels, simply people making choices, which sometimes might be questionable, but as a reader you always understand where they come from. This woman is a genius.

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Subjects

  • Family secrets
  • Adoption
  • Female friendship
  • Single mothers
  • Secrecy
  • Fiction