Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Burnt

A Memoir of Fighting Fire

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Burnt is a captivating and "evocative" (Erin Brockovich) memoir of trailblazing and firefighting from California's first—and only—female chief of fire protection, a pioneering woman in a male-dominated field.

Burnt is a book about finding your calling, even if it's an unexpected one. It's about finding your home, even if you aren't immediately welcomed. And it's about reaching the top and making a difference, even if you don't look like you fit in.

When Clare Frank was 17 years old, she became a firefighter in Northern California. Clare was five-foot-two and officially too young to join the service—she left her birthdate blank on her paperwork, hoping no one would notice. And she didn't look like her peers, who sported an Adam's apple and a mustache. But her brother was a firefighter and loved it, so she thought she'd try it out, too. Very soon, she knew she had found her calling.

Burnt is Frank's inspiring, richly detailed, and open-hearted account of an extraordinary life in fire. It chronicles the transformation of a young adult determined to prove her mettle into a scarred and sensitive veteran, grappling with the weight of her duties as chief of fire protection—one of the highest-ranking women in Cal Fire history—while record-setting fires engulf her home state.
Mentors and mediocre managers, funerals and scandal, pickup basketball, car crashes, and always fire—no one has written about this world, from this perspective, like Clare Frank. She masterfully mixes irreverence and awe, taking readers inside firehouses, on daily calls, and along to gigantic wildfires where antics and dark humor balance terrifying risk, trauma, and a sense of almost holy responsibility.
Burnt: A Memoir of Fighting Fire is an unforgettable memoir from an American original.
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2023
      A pioneering woman firefighter recounts a life on the line. Frank opens on a climacteric point long into her multidecade career: She was in line for a promotion to California's state chief of fire protection, "a position six ranks above captain, and successor to the director if something took him out of play." The problem was, after attaining the rank of captain, you can't ride in a firetruck, and a firetruck is where she was born to be. The author writes about her beginnings as a rookie longing for a fire in California's backcountry that would allow her to prove herself to those who doubted she belonged; of one surprising ladder maneuver, she writes, "It wasn't martial arts pretty, but I left some mouths open." After battling lightning- and human-caused wildfires, stumbling upon remote marijuana fields and meth labs, and facing just about every challenge fire could throw her way, a gruesome injury forced her to leave active service. She studied for a law degree and entered the corporate world for only as long as it took to heal and then got right back out on the line. "I liked lawyering," she writes, "but it didn't satisfy me the way firefighting did--especially on a day like [9/11]. While former colleagues packed their bags to help at Ground Zero and my brother drove north to protect our state, I sat in my ergonomically correct chair, shoes kicked off under my desk, feeling useless." Throughout the book, Frank is energetic and inspirational, especially to women considering work in the field--though she is always candid about the countless dangers of the job, from being caught up in a firestorm to going down in a tanker plane. Regardless of the potential pitfalls, there will be plenty of work in the future, with climate change ensuring that large swaths of California will burn regularly. The author includes a helpful 12-page glossary at the end. A vigorous and quite timely memoir.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      May 5, 2023

      Fire is a force of nature with a will of its own. This image is captured forcefully in this debut written by Frank, a woman who, in the 1980s, became a California firefighter at the age of 17; she left her birthdate blank on her paperwork. In this title, she arranges stories about her career, descriptions of people and places, and reflections in the same chronological way a fire would burn, from ignition to fully developed to decay. She infuses her stories with both introspection and humor. Supporting details shed light on her unconventional upbringing with parents who moved constantly. She depicts her own attraction to firefighting both as a way to have a secure career and as a series of adventurous encounters to test herself and prove her worth to anyone who puts obstacles in her way. She became California's first woman chief of fire protection. Her own successful attempts to fit into a man-dominated vocation and then to make the service better for everyone ring true. Her thoughts on fighting continuous wildfires today hold relevance as well. VERDICT Suitable for career collections and all that support fire science, environmental programs, and women's studies.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2023
      Good memoirs can introduce intriguing individuals and provide access to rarefied pursuits. Author Frank manages both in this account of her fiercely independent life and 30-plus years as a firefighter in California. The youngest of six, Frank emancipated herself at 16 from her loving but religion-obsessed parents. Following a path laid by her older brother Mark, Frank attended training camp to become a seasonal firefighter. Finishing first in her class earned her a job, and despite being only five feet two inches tall and barely 17 years old, she started her career, eventually ascending through the ranks of engineer, captain, and battalion chief all the way to California State Chief of Fire Protection. Using three different timelines, Frank weaves together profiles of her parents and siblings, especially Mark and Annie, her sister who has special needs; moment-by-moment descriptions of fighting fires and forging lifelong bonds with colleagues; and her life as a senior administrator and retiree. The action scenes are compelling; there are hard-won victories and excruciating losses, and Frank emerges as a relatable and thoroughly human hero.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading