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Not on Fire, but Burning

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Twenty-year-old Skyler saw the incident out her window: Some sort of metallic object hovering over the Golden Gate Bridge just before it collapsed and a mushroom cloud lifted above the city. Like everyone, she ran, but she couldn't outrun the radiation, with her last thoughts being of her beloved baby brother, Dorian, safe in her distant family home. 

Flash forward to a post-incident America, where the country has been broken up into territories and Muslims have been herded onto the old Indian reservations in the west, even though no one has determined who set off the explosion that destroyed San Francisco. Twelve-year old Dorian dreams about killing Muslims and about his sister—even though Dorian's parents insist Skyler never existed. Are they still shell-shocked, trying to put the past behind them . . . or is something more sinister going on?

Meanwhile, across the street, Dorian's neighbor adopts a Muslim orphan from the territories. It will set off a...
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 10, 2015
      Hrbek (The Hindenberg Crashes Nightly) balances equal parts suspense and introspection in this portrait of a near-future world teetering between annihilation and redemption. The story opens with a harrowing scene: a young woman, Skyler, babysitting for a little boy who reminds her of her own much younger brother, Dorian, witnesses a nuclear terrorist attack that begins with an assault on the Golden Gate Bridge. Fast forward eight years to 2038, when Dorian is almost 12. Now living with his parents and older brother on the other side of the country, he is growing up in a deeply distrustful, war-torn America in which all Muslims have been interred on former Indian reservations. Dorian, who blames Islamic radicals for that still-unexplained terrorist attack that haunts his dreams, is deeply apprehensive when their neighbor adopts a young Muslim boy, Karim, disrupting the fragile sense of security in their neighborhood. Suspicion and prejudices steadily escalate, yet Hrbek still manages to interject thought-provoking asides, from the life cycle of the 17-year locust to theories of the multiverse. In the end, Hrbek's narrative is a profound cautionary tale, a vivid and often deeply unnerving reminder that our choices carry real and lasting consequences.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from August 1, 2015
      In which unthinkable calamity propels a nation-and a family-into a rapidly imploding dystopia and slow-motion apocalypse. It begins with what seems at first like a plane heading for the Golden Gate Bridge, except that it's "too bright" to be a plane but more "like something cosmic come at high speed through the atmosphere." Whatever it is, Skyler Wakefield, a 20-year-old college student and aspiring novelist, sees it shatter the bridge and bathe everything around it in near-blinding radioactive heat. Years after San Francisco and most of its inhabitants perish, America is a tense, fragmented society of colonies, territories, and prairie internment camps for Muslims. (Early reports alleged the words "Air Arabia" could be seen on the projectile that hit the bridge.) Skyler's baby brother, Dorian, is 12 years old and haunted by dreams of a dead sister who the rest of his still-traumatized family insists never existed. Meanwhile, the family's next-door neighbor, a 71-year-old veteran of something called Gulf War III, has made his way to one of the detention centers to adopt a Muslim orphan named Karim, who's the same age as Dorian-who, as it happens, is cultivating a hard-core prejudice against Muslims. His impromptu expression of an ethnic slur at a backyard barbecue leads to a bloody fight between him and Karim. More grievances accumulate, leading to more bigotry and malign conspiracies on both sides of the American and Arab divide...and greater horrors to come. Hrbek's (Destroy All Monsters, 2011, etc.) engagement with themes of loss and recovery and his vibrantly lyrical prose style reach a peak in this dark, allusive fantasy, which seems intended as a metaphor for the anxieties still lurking in our post-9/11 universe. As one of the book's characters says, "What are we living in now, if not fear?" Which, as Hrbek implies (and FDR once famously proclaimed), may itself be a worse enemy than any other we can find, or contrive, for ourselves. If you want a hint of where Hrbek is going, thematically, with this story, look to the title of a short story collection written about 80 years ago in an America far different from ours: In Dreams Begin Responsibilities.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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