Puneet Varma (Editor)

The Great Fire (novel)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6.8
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
6.8
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print (paperback)

ISBN
  
0-374-16644-7

Originally published
  
2003

Country
  
Australia

3.4/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
2003

Pages
  
278 pp

OCLC
  
52341650

Author
  
Shirley Hazzard

The Great Fire (novel) t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcT6Vu7z4U4BDyjeK9

Genres
  
Novel, Fiction, Romance novel

Publishers
  
Farrar, Straus and Giroux (USA), Virago Press (UK)

Awards
  
National Book Award for Fiction

Similar
  
Shirley Hazzard books, National Book Award for Fiction winners, Novels

The Great Fire (2003) is a novel by the Australian author Shirley Hazzard. It won the U.S. National Book Award for Fiction and a Miles Franklin literary award (2004). The novel was Hazzard's first since The Transit of Venus, published in 1980.

Contents

Overview

The novel commences in Japan in 1947, and subsequently takes in Hong Kong, England and New Zealand. Written in the third-person narrative, the novel principally follows its protagonist, the decorated British war veteran Aldred Leith, who is travelling through post-war Asia to write a book. At times the narrator follows Peter Exley, an Australian friend of Leith's who is investigating Japanese war crimes, and Helen Driscoll, an Australian teenager with whom Leith falls in love while billeted in Japan.

The New Yorker wrote of the novel:

Hazzard is nothing if not discriminating. Hierarchies of feeling, perception, and taste abound in her writing, and this novel—her first in more than twenty years—takes on the very notion of what it means to be civilized. The fire of the title refers primarily to the atomic bombing of Japan, but also to the possibility of transcendent passion in its aftermath. In 1947, a thirty-two-year-old English war hero visiting Hiroshima during the occupation finds himself billeted in a compound overseen by a boorish Australian brigadier and his scheming wife. He is immediately enchanted, however, by the couple's children—a brilliant, sickly young man and his adoring sister—who prove to be prisoners in a different sort of conflict. In the ensuing love story, Hazzard's moral refinement occasionally veers toward preciosity, but such lapses are counterbalanced by her bracing conviction that we either build or destroy the world we want to live in with our every word and gesture.

Awards

  • National Book Award (USA), Fiction, 2003
  • Miles Franklin Literary Award, 2004
  • William Dean Howells Medal, 2005
  • Runners up
  • Kiriyama Pacific Rim Book Prize, Fiction, 2004: finalist
  • Man Booker Prize, 2004: longlisted
  • Orange Prize for Fiction (UK), 2004: shortlisted
  • International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, 2005: shortlisted
  • References

    The Great Fire (novel) Wikipedia