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Burn

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"The best thing to do for someone who thinks he's lost his whole life is to make him feel like it's been given back to him.

That's why I can do this. Fire can fix it."

William Tucker always does the right thing. He excels at high school, works at the grocery store, passes out bulletins at his father's church, and still finds time to fight fires as the newest volunteer firefighter in Coosa Creek, Alabama.

But no matter how many good deeds William does, it never seems like enough. So when his father's expectations and the community's hypocrisy become too much to bear, William's obsession with doing good transforms into something far more dangerous.

"Gibson pens authentic Southern, small-town teenspeak and settings that add fuel to the fires (so to speak) of William's life. Compelling."—KIRKUS REVIEWS

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    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2012
      A good-ol'-boy teen firefighter might not be quite as good as he seems. At first glance, Alabama country bumpkin Wee Wee--short for William--seems like the perfect small-town hero. He regularly goes to the church where his daddy preaches. He sticks up for the underdogs, including his gay younger brother and Samantha, a beautiful African-American teen girl who's new in town. Finally, despite his alcoholic mother's worries, he's also the town's finest volunteer firefighter. Gibson packs in a good number of rescue scenes that will have readers racing through the pages. What they don't realize, however, is that William may actually have more of hand in these fires than it seems. The psychological reasoning provided for his motives feels shaky, but readers will definitely do a double take and even reread some of the more shocking moments. Gibson pens authentic Southern, small-town teenspeak and settings that add fuel to the fires (so to speak) of William's life. Readers know he's torn between his father's religious teachings and doing the right thing for his brother, but deep inside he secretly relishes the cleansing flames of fire. Readers know that it's only a matter of time before he gets caught by the law or by his own doings, and they will find waiting for it compelling reading. (Fiction. 13 & up)

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2012
      Grades 8-11 True moral ambiguitywith no light at the end of the tunnelis a rare thing in YA, and Gibson's convincing portrait of a good-hearted pyromaniac gives readers no choice but to embrace the contradictions. Wee Wee, so named for his 5'3 stature, would be just another high-school kid if it weren't for his work with the Coosa Creek, Alabama, volunteer fire department. He's called a hero after he saves a classmate's life from a science-experiment fire, and the adulation that follows moves him to set further fires so that he's the first to arrive to douse them: I have to keep reminding myself there's going to be something good in this, something new and clean. Gibson depicts Wee Wee as a sturdy, courageous teenager who defies racist townspeople by dating a black girl and who supports his gay brother in the face of public scorn. Starting dangerous fires is a facet of his personality that both narrator and author give no greater weight than other, more positive traitsand that's a brave move.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

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