Product Description
In
The Big Burn, Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winner Timothy Egan tells the story of the largest forest fire in American history, a storm that destroyed seven towns, killed 86 people and raged across three million acres in Montana and Idaho in 1910. It was also a fire that changed American conservation, finally prompting a reluctant Congress to give the Forest Service the power to oversee the forests of the American West. Through the eyes of characters famous (Teddy Roosevelt, a few years out of office, but infuriated by how timber barons were ignoring his legacy and not-so-famous (immigrants, new to the West, caught in the firestorm), Egan paints a picture of a West that was still wild, a time when timber barons had rule over the forests and owned their Senators outright.
The fire itself lasted barely three days during a time of intense heat and drought. People ran into mine shafts for cover, went underwater with breathing tubes, some even took their own lives. Entire towns were consumed in the blink of an eye. The fire created its own weather system, darkened the sky for 500 square miles, and sent smoke across the United States. There were heroic attempts to stay alive, to save towns, and horrid missteps as well. Ultimately, the lesson learned from the disaster was the wrong one: hereafter, the government suppressed every forest fire, setting the stage fo the catastrophic fires of today.
With the same power and propulsive storytelling that made
The Worst Hard Time a critical and commercial blockbuster, Egan tells an epic story of an environmental disaster, paints a moving portrait of the people who fought and survived it, and offers a critical cautionary tale for today.
About the Author
TIMOTHY EGAN worked for 18 years as a writer for
The New York Times, first as the Pacific Northwest correspondent, then as a national enterprise reporter; now his column appears online weekly in the op-ed section. In 2006 he won the National Book Award for
The Worst Hard Time. In 2001 he won the Pulitzer Prize as part of a team of reporters who wrote the series "How Race is Lived In America." Egan is the author of five books and lives in Seattle, Washington.