A Good Morning America Buzz Pick - An NPR Best Book of 2023 "The Richmond Theatre fire of 1811 was, at the time, the deadliest disaster in U.S. history, killing seventy-two. This historical novel examines the event and its aftermath through four figures: the stagehand who accidentally starts the fire; a well-to-do widow in a box seat; an enslaved young woman, attending with her mistress but confined to the colored gallery; and a blacksmith, also enslaved, who rushes to the scene and rescues patrons jumping from windows. The bad behavior of the powerful becomes a theme: the theatre company attempts to pin blame on a fabricated slave revolt, and men in the audience trample their wives in making their escape." --The New Yorker "Beanland''s gripping fictional account delves into this tragedy [the Richmond Theater Fire], examining the aftermath, the stories that were told and the blame that was unfairly laid on people without the means to defend themselves." --Washington Post "The House Is on Fire is wildly entertaining and it deals with touchy subjects very well. [The characters] all have unique voices and their stories are treated with equal care and attention, which speaks volumes not only about Beanland''s research skills but also the empathy she has for the people she writes about.
This novel is a fictionalized slice of history, but in a time when so many treat teaching history as a taboo, it is also a stark reminder of how privilege, sexism, and racism have been in this country''s DNA since its inception, and that makes it necessary reading." --NPR "Beanland has created characters so vivid they leap off the page. A great, gripping read. Using tight, visceral prose and compact scenes covering a few minutes'' worth of action at a time, Beanland creates a breathless, suspenseful pace. She follows up the story with a substantial author''s note to clarify which characters and elements of the book are historical and which imagined. This is a page-turner that will leave the reader fired up and, hopefully, reflecting on whether the questions of injustice within have relevant parallels today." --BookBrowse "THE HOUSE IS ON FIRE is the very best that historical fiction has to offer: a riveting investigation of a dark periodi n our nation''s history and a championo f the voices most often silenced. Beanland has done great justice not only to the history of the Richmond Theater Fire, but to the real people who witnessed it, survived it and saved others from it.
Tautly written and sensitively told, this is a masterwork from an author as compassionate as she is thorough." --Bookreporter "A narrative brimming with immediacy and authenticity. Beanland''s principled approach to history, her fine-tuned prose, her profound intellect and her benevolent humanity combine to shine in this absorbing novel, one that discerning readers will embrace." --Richmond Post Dispatch "Seamlessly interweaving historical facts and her own narrative, Beanland follows these four characters through the fire, the immediate, chaotic aftermath, and the subsequent investigation. Fully realized characters and gripping prose makes for an excellent, riveting novel that is highly recommended." -- Booklist, starred review "Powerful. Beanland enlivens the smart and suspenseful narrative with fully developed protagonists that illuminate the community''s response to mass catastrophe. Readers will relish this.
" --Publishers Weekly, starred review "Fans of historical fiction will find themselves enraptured by Beanland''s take on the true story of the Richmond theater fire in 1811. Told from the perspective of four people whose actions during the inferno changed the course of history, The House Is On Fire is an all-consuming exploration of redemption and perseverance in the face of tragedy." --E News "I loved Beanland''s first novel, Florence Adler Swims Forever, featuring a Jewish family in 1930s Atlantic City, and this one, with its very different cast and setting, did not disappoint. Beanland''s writing is sharp and clever, with lively dialogue. And although this is a character-driven novel, the plot kept me in suspense until the very end; only having to get off my train made me stop reading. I wouldn''t have minded staying on board." --Historical Novels Review "Propulsive.full of historical detail and full-blooded characters" --Shelf Awareness "The world is about to be on fire with the publication of THE HOUSE IS ON FIRE.
This is a propulsive, pulse-pounding read--one that grabbed hold of me and didn''t let me go until the very last page. It is the kind of book you finish with a sigh, and hope against hope there is a sequel coming." --Kathleen Grissom, New York Times bestselling author of The Kitchen House, Glory Over Everything and Crow Mary "Beanland''s research is meticulous, her characters are well drawn, and her writing is gorgeous. The House Is on Fire is a stunning achievement." --Jeannette Walls, New York Times bestselling author of The Glass Castle and the forthcoming Hang The Moon "The House is on Fire captures the disastrous night hour by hour, reminiscent of watching a true crime drama on TV. Most importantly, Beanland''s choice to explore the tragedy through four very differently privileged people allows the story to go beyond facts and into the moral fabric and social norms of the time. It is disturbing to be reminded of the vice grip of racism, class and sexism while a deadly fire rages on. Fast-moving, character-driven and action-packed, The House is on Fire is simply a thrill to read.
" --Bookpage "The House is on Fire is a marvel. It has everything I want from historical fiction. It makes the past as urgent for its readers as it would have been for its characters. Beginning with one tragic mistake, the raising of a chandelier, Beanland expertly leads her readers through a spellbinding story of early America in all its complexity and contradiction." --Kevin Powers, author of National Book Award finalist The Yellow Birds "A riveting story that places the reader at the very heart of a devastating, true-life tragedy. Beanland has clearly done her research, and the effect is both heart wrenching and eye-opening, as unlikely heroes and unforgivable cowards add to the rich mosaic of a community torn apart in a single night. Enthralling." --Fiona Davis, New York Times bestselling author of The Magnolia Place "The House Is On Fire is a dynamic novel with an unforgettable cast of diverse and intricately and gracefully crafted characters.
Beanland deftly explores the complications of community, race and class, loyalty and sacrifice, and the various types of freedom. Rachel Beanland, once again, has proven herself to be a remarkable storyteller." --De''Shawn Charles Winslow, author of In West Mills "THE HOUSE IS ON FIRE is a trenchant examination of the way tragedy shines a light on the best and worst of humankind and how we find agency and courage in the face of darkness and destruction. By turns heartbreaking and heart-pounding, Rachel Beanland''s sophomore novel is a mesmerizing portrait of four unforgettable characters and how both chance and choice shape their fates." --Caitlin Mullen, author of Please See Us "Beanland has an uncanny skill for capturing the voices of a range of people at a time in history when only a few had their experiences recounted, making THE HOUSE IS ON FIRE an enriching and elucidating blend of both historical fact and fiction." --Natalie Jenner, author of The Jane Austen Society and Bloomsbury Girls "If ever you doubt the interconnectedness of human beings, Rachel Beanland''s The House Is On Fire will remind you. In a hundred deftly crafted moments, large and small, the survival of one character hinges on the integrity and courage of another--sometimes unbeknownst to them both. Beautifully constructed and sensitively told, this novel will wring out your heart and make you grateful for it.
" --June Gervais, author of Jobs For Girls With Artistic Flair "I whipped through this book as if the pages themselves were on fire. Heart-pounding and suspenseful, this is unputdownable historical fiction at its finest. In THE HOUSE IS ON FIRE, Rachel Beanland gives us a front-row seat to a terrifying nineteenth-century calamity and the fascinating cast of villains, heroes, and everyone-in-between who must confront it and cope with the aftermath. These characters have been seared into my memory and this story will stick with me." --Elise Hooper, author of Angels of the Pacific "As the writer of a nonfiction book about the Richmond theater fire, I recognized the faces and places Beanland brings to life and marveled at her impressive research and attention to historical dealer. At turns heartbreaking and hopeful." --Meredith Henne Baker, author of The Richmond Theater Fire: Early America''s First Great Disaster "Beanland proves again that she is a master storyteller with a tight grasp of the historical record. Here, with both warm and exacting prose, she has breathed life back into a night of shocking tragedy for a young country, returning.