This book opens in 1997 with the tenents of the Richardson family the Warrens, Mia and Pearl, leaving at night and dropping off the key in the mailbox. Then the next day the Richardson house is on fire and it was set by the youngest Richardson child, Izzy, leaving Lexie, Trip, Moody, and their parents, Elena, and Bill without a home. But what else would you expect from Izzy? She is always doing crazy things and seeming to let her mother down constantly and be a genuine screw up her entire life. Her mother has her reasons for criticizing her and it comes from a place of love but Izzy doesn't know that or feel that.
Now, what led up to these events? Mia is an artist whose medium is photography and she and Pearl travel constantly in search of artistic endeavors. But this time Mia has promised Pearl that they will stay put and her sophomore daughter can finish high school in one place. But what a place it is. Shaker Heights, Ohio is not reality. It's its own world. Where you have to be a certain kind of person to stay there. Everything is planned in this suburb of Cleveland including what you can paint your house or where you can put your trash can or you'll be charged if your grass gets a certain length.
The big story in this novel is how a friend of Mia's Bebe Chow who had given up her child to the fire department during the winter because she was suffering from postpartum depression and had no money for food or diapers for her child and thought she was doing the best thing for her. Well, a local family was given her daughter to adopt. Bebe who had lost her job gets another job and cleans herself up and goes to every fire department looking for her baby but has no luck.
Then Mia who has taken some work cleaning and making dinner at the Richardsons hears that the Richardson's friends are adopting a baby that was found at a fire station and Mia tells Bebe. Bebe goes to the press and causes a huge commotion. It will cause a split in the town as Bebe fights for her child back and Bill Richardson, a lawyer, represents the adopting family.
Elena who is close friends with the adopted mother and believes in following the rules to a tee cannot believe it when she finds that Mia is behind Bebe's claim. So she becomes out to get Mia and begins to research her life as Elena is a journalist at a small local paper. Pearl first makes friends with Moody a quiet young man who fits his name. He is not popular like his older brother Trip or sister Lexie. Thinking that he is not enough to dazzle Pearl he introduces her to his family at his house and that is the beginning of the end. Moody is in love with Pearl who is attracted to Trip. Lexie who is a bit shallow will find her own life turned upside down and needing Pearl's help. Izzy falls in love with Mia as a mother figure and begins to work with her on photography projects.
This book is just plain amazing in its characterization. The characters are so fully realized and realistic that you feel as though you know them. The story is rich and compelling especially the way Pearl is seduced by the Richardsons. In a way, she is an innocent no matter how much she has seen of America. And why Izzy sets fire to the house is perfect. This is one of those incredible and special books that don't come along very often. I highly recommend reading it. I give it five out of five stars.
Quotes
Being allowed to do something and knowing how to do it are not the same thing.-Celeste Ng (Little Fires Everywhere p 63)I do not get the obsession [over babies]. They eat. They sleep. They poop. They cry. I’d rather have a dog.-Celeste Ng (Little Fires Everywhere p 122)Parents learned to survive touching their children less and less…It was the way of things, Mia thought to herself, but how hard it was. The occasional embrace, a head leaned for just a moment on your shoulder, when what you wanted more than anything was to press them to you and hold them so tight you fused together and could never be taken apart. It was like training yourself to live on the smell of an apple alone, when what you really wanted was to devour it, to sink your teeth into it and consume it, seeds, core, and all.-Celeste Ng (Little Fires Everywhere p 248-9)But the problem with rules, he reflected, was that they implied a right way and a wrong way to do things. When, in fact, most of the time there were simply ways, none of them quite wrong or quite right, and nothing to tell you for sure which side of the line you stood on.-Celeste Ng (Little Fires Everywhere p 269)
Link to Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/Little-Fires-Everywhere-Celeste-Ng-ebook/dp/B01N4VW75U/ref=sr_1_1?crid=1H4O08YT2AKNW&keywords=little+fires+everywhere+by+celeste+ng&qid=1550064604&s=gateway&sprefix=little+fires+%2Caps%2C179&sr=8-1
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