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The Stars Are Fire by Anita Shreve

The Stars Are Fire

by Anita Shreve

  • Critics' Consensus (0):
  • Readers' Rating (40):
  • Published:
  • Apr 2017, 256 pages
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There are currently 40 reader reviews for The Stars Are Fire
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Gretchen M. (Martinsburg, WV)

Strong female character
The main character of this book, Grace, experiences the Maine fires of 1947. She overcomes the devastation of her home and marriage with strength and determination during a time period when women were expected to be homemakers and wives. Shreve does an excellent job of creating the image of the destruction the fires created and the survival attempts the citizens endured.
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Dorothy L. (Boca Raton, FL)

An Enjoyable Read
I liked this book. I thought the main characters, especially Grace, were developed well. Her transformation from a survivor to a strong independent woman was believable to me in the context of the plot. Sometimes we have to go through life altering events in order to find out who we really are. The setting was almost like another character in the book. It changed as the story evolved and provided the external conflict that permeated the novel, man vs. nature. I think there is a great deal to discuss in this novel and intend to recommend it to my book club.
Gail K. (Saratoga Springs, NY)

Enjoyable historical fiction
Readers who enjoy novels about strong female protagonists will rejoice as they watch Grace Holland grow into a strong, independent woman after her repressive, unfeeling husband fails to return to her after going to fight a fire that threatens their community. Add to that the post-World War II time period and the backdrop of the Great Fire of 1947 that ravaged the coast of Maine from Bar Harbor to Kittery, and there is the making of a compelling read. I had to stop in the middle of my reading to google the Great Fire and then found myself that much more engaged in the story, knowing the fire had actually occurred.more
Mary H. (Ocala, FL)

Bravo!
In October 1947 fires in Maine destroyed thousands of acres of forested lands, decimated a number of coastal towns, and left more than 2,500 people homeless. In her latest novel, Anita Shreve uses these real events to weave a powerful story of loss and self-discovery.

Grace Holland is a timid young wife and mother, existing in a marriage lacking in love and without any true communication or intimacy. Her joy comes from her two children and her neighbor Rosie.

As the fires bear down on their small town, Grace waits with the children while her husband goes off to fight the fires. Grace and her children survive themore
Ellen, Polo Public Library, IL

The year a state burned
Like her previous books Shreve has written a story that grips the reader and doesn't let go. This story is based on true events following one family through a natural disaster and it's aftermath. The characters are developed quickly and the story just takes off. There is never a feeling of "just get on with it". Each turn of the page as the story unfolds takes the reader closer to the inevitable ending. I just wanted Grace's story to go on and for her to finally find some happiness in life after all that's she's been through.
Cindy B. (Houston, TX)

Beautifully written book
The Stars Are Fire is a beautifully written story that is both heart-breaking and ultimately redemptive. The story is based on the true story of the 1947 fire that burned a significant portion of Maine's coastal towns. As the book opens, Grace and her family live in a small coastal town that is in the midst of a drought. Grace struggles with the discontent she feels with her life and her husband. As the drought continues, the land becomes so dry that fire becomes a giant fear for Maine's residents. The fire begins fairly far away from Grace's town and skeptical that the fire will reach their town, residents aremore
Colleen L. (Casco, ME)

Stronger than you know....
Anita Shreve has penned another winner. During the late 1940s, a great fire occurred on the coast of Maine. Shreve used this true event as a springboard for her story about Grace who is a typical '40s housewife married to Gene. She introduces us to Grace's life - her marriage, her two children, her mother and her best friend Rosie. Here is where Shreve shines. Her characters are real and believable. The relationship between Grace and Gene is complex and Shreve does a good job leading the reader along carefully so that you understand something is amiss but are unsure as to what it is. When the fire occurs andmore
Becky M. (Crumpler, NC)

Woman of Yesterday/Woman of Today
Anita Shreve has created a character who embodies the struggle of women in the past as the precursor for women of today. Set amid the historical fires of coastal Maine in 1947, Grace finds herself cast into a life of struggle, suddenly without a husband, parenting alone, with no home, no work experience, no life skills. But she is not daunted. She is the classic driven woman, determined to take care of her family and to re-invent herself. I could not put down this book, eager to see if life would equalize for her or defeat her--if love would elude her or find her. The reader roots for Grace, urging her to movemore

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