From Publishers Weekly
The fire that roared through the Barnum & Bailey Circus tent in Hartford, Conn., on July 6, 1944, took 169 lives and injured 2000 others. Tirone-Smith ( The Book of Phoebe ) makes that conflagration central to her new novel, a skillfully controlled, moving psychological exploration of secrets, traumas and family relationships. The narrator, Margie Potter, was only six months old on the day her mother took her to the circus; her mother perished, and Maggie herself bears livid scars on her back. Having spent her youth repressing her memories and burying herself in books, Margie marries an intense fireman, Charlie O'Neill, who is singularly obsessed with the fire and determined to find the arsonist whom he is certain set the blaze. Over the years Charlie becomes more and more compulsive about tracking down leads, emotionally distancing himself from Margie and their feisty daughter Martha. The clue to his obsessive dedication, and to the arsonist's identity, comes only when Margie begins to acknowledge her own complicity in his monomania. In matching her narrative tone with her heroine's lower-middle class diction and deliberate emotional restraint, the author risks a slow beginning in order to build suspense in subtle increments. She keeps the prose cool and spare, so that when harrowing details and jolting surprises gradually occur, the effect is potent. The final epiphany opens the narrative in an extraordinary way, forcing the reader to reassess everything. This daringly imagined novel adds a new dimension to an already impressive body of work.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
The intrusion of the past into the lives of Charlie and Margie O'Neill is revealed in a deceptively simple story with its roots in the historical 1944 Barnum & Bailey circus tent fire, in Hartford, Connecticut, which killed more than 150 people and injured over a thousand women and children. Ten-year-old Charlie, who had a ticket to the circus, grows up to become a fire fighter, determined to discover who set the fire and why. He marries Margie Potter, the fire's youngest survivor, who has no memories of the event that killed her mother and left her back badly scarred. Despite a somewhat predictable plot, this is a book with quiet appeal. Likable characters and good psychological insights make this fourth novel by the author of The Port of Missing Men (LJ 4/15/89) an appropriate choice for larger fiction collections.
Nancy Pearl, Washington Center for the Book, SeattleCopyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.