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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Big Burn
The story takes place in Northern Idaho during the 1910 Fire. As a librarian for youth I found this book to rate five stars and more. Ingold has made the 1910 fire come alive. You can really picture the sights and smells during the catastrophe. The story involves three teens and their survival. A must read.
Published on January 9, 2003

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Summer Reading Book
This book was purchased for my son's summer reading. He thought the book would have been better. We recieved the book at thetime it was expected.
Published 4 months ago by Jim


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent historical fiction!, March 24, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Big Burn (Hardcover)
Ingold tells the reader that if you talk with anyone in Idaho or Montana for long enough, the subject of the Big Burn will come up, and the person telling you about it will expect you to know all about it. After reading Ingold's well-researched book, any reader would be able to contribute to the subject. Set in 1910, when forest rangers were new, railroads were huge, and immigrants were still flooding the country, The Big Burn tells the story of the wild fires of the northwestern United States. Ingold gives us three main characters: Jarrett, Lisbeth and Seth. These teenagers each deal with the fire in their own way, and find that there is more to fighting fires than a little water or ditch digging. The three do meet in the tale (it is plausible), and each tell their view of the events in concurrent chapters. Ingold breaks in with facts and accounts of actual events, which makes the fictitious story feel all the more real.

Ingold has done her homework, and it shows in the story. Her afterword, acknowledgements, and list of suggested reading at the end all provide valuable information. The only problem I had with the book was a bit of charaterization--the relationships between the characters felt forced and unbelievable, particularly the budding romance between Jarrett and Lisbeth. On their own, the characters were strong, interesting, and contributed to the story. But when they came in contact with the others, even the minor characters became a bit forced in the relationships in which they were observing or participating. Otherwise this is a wonderful example of great historical fiction.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Big Burn, January 9, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Big Burn (Hardcover)
The story takes place in Northern Idaho during the 1910 Fire. As a librarian for youth I found this book to rate five stars and more. Ingold has made the 1910 fire come alive. You can really picture the sights and smells during the catastrophe. The story involves three teens and their survival. A must read.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 1910 forest fire book review., December 12, 2009
By 
Zane Smith (Springfield, OR) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: The Big Burn (Paperback)
A delightful read designed for teens and young adults, but at 76 years of age I thoroughly enjoyed it. I was surprised at the accuracy of the 1910 fire event, the culture of the time and place and the account of the early day Forest Service. As a third generation Forest Service retiree and having worked on the Coeur d'Alene National forest and the Wallace District, I personally knew some of the people who lived in Wallace during the time. I recommend it.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Big Burn by Jeannette Ingold, November 9, 2011
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This review is from: The Big Burn (Paperback)
I had read The Big Burn by Timothy Eagan. So on a recent trip, I stopped in Wallace, ID and this Big Burn was recommended by a person in the visitor center. So far, it is a good read. More fiction but also interesting
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3.0 out of 5 stars Summer Reading Book, September 17, 2011
By 
Jim (Havertown, PA, US) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Big Burn (Paperback)
This book was purchased for my son's summer reading. He thought the book would have been better. We recieved the book at thetime it was expected.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Richie's Picks: THE BIG BURN, September 24, 2006
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This review is from: The Big Burn (Hardcover)
THE BIG BURN is a fascinating and harrowing historic novel set in the midst of a forest fire that trashed Northern Idaho and Western Montana in 1910. It was a large forest fire. "How large?" you may ask. Okay--If there are 640 acres in a square mile and there were nearly three million acres affected by THE BIG BURN, then we're talking an area nearly 4700 square miles. Sonoma County, where I live, is one-third that size. If you consider the San Francisco Bay Area counties of Santa Cruz, Santa Clara, San Mateo, San Francisco, Marin, AND Sonoma together, then you've got a sense of the scale of the destruction. For those of you on the East Coast, we're talking Long Island, plus all of New York's boroughs, and the counties of Westchester, Rockland, Putnam, Orange, Dutchess, and Columbia.

"Field Notes: In the summer of 1910, rangers who were used to working in isolation suddenly found their forests filling with strangers. With new fires breaking out daily through July and older ones stubbornly resisting control, the Forest Service's District One had no choice but to hire more and more men to fight them. By the end of the month, there were almost three thousand firefighters scattered across the district's several forests...W.B. Greeley, would later write, 'It was a case of hiring anyone we could get. We cleaned out Skid Road in Spokane and Butte. A lot of temporaries were bums and hobos. In a bad fire year, the temporary is the weakest link in the chain'...They went into the burning forests wearing the clothes they'd been recruited in, and the ones wearing street shoes or snug wool suits would regret that. They worked for twenty-five cents an hour with board, thirty if they provided their own food..."

In THE BIG BURN we do meet a few scoundrels. But the main characters here are three young people--Jarrett, a local boy who leaves his harsh dad; Seth, a southern kid in a black regiment who is trying to live up to the memory of his dead father; and Lizbeth, a young woman originally from New England, who is falling in love with the land she's found herself homesteading with her young, widowed aunt. All three cross paths before finding themselves in the midst of Hell on Earth.

Perhaps the publisher is calling this an "ages 12 and up" to spare younger children potential nightmares from the vividly drawn scenes of towering flames bearing down on our heroes. But for any kid whose tastes run to disaster and survival, mixed into a coming of age story, THE BIG BURN is a riveting read.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The Big Burn, G.S.'s Reveiw, April 12, 2005
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Big Burn (Paperback)
Jeanette Ingold has pulled out all stops in her book called The Bug Burn. In this exciting tale of Idaho's wildfires in 1910, three young adults battle the forces of nature. Seth, Jaret, and Lizbeth each fight life in their own way, and overcome personal obstacles. Seth is an African American trying to fit-in in the army. Jaret is a rebel son as he goes looking for a job in firefighting after he got fired from his railroad job. Lizbeth is a niece who is trying to convince her aunt not to sell their homestead. I like this book because it is full of action and adventure, but educational at the same time. I would give it five out of five stars because I had a fun time reading it and learned a lot from it. I can't tell you the ending, but I can give you a little sneak peek. The strong wind blows many fires together, creating a giant blaze. That blaze charges forward, burning everything in its path. Eventually it comes to a city named Wallace, and everyone has to work together to try to stop it. Do they succeed? Read the book, The Big Burn, to find out.
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4.0 out of 5 stars The Big Burn, March 25, 2005
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Big Burn (Paperback)
I think that The Big Burn was a very precice and educational book. The main carachters were Jarett, a young man wanting to fight fires with his older brother; Seth, An afircan American young man trying to show his pride for his country by joining the army; and Lizbeth, a young women trying to stay and keep her aunt from selling their home. The setting is 1910's, in Idaho and Montana. They over come some goals, and others are crushed. This all adds up untill the climax were all the flames come together and
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5.0 out of 5 stars THE BIG BURN is a great choice., July 29, 2004
By 
This review is from: The Big Burn (Paperback)
In light of the recent wildfires in Colorado and Arizona, THE BIG BURN is an interesting book, but it would certainly be noteworthy under any circumstances. The story follows two young men and a young woman as they encounter and combat the infamously ferocious Montana wildfires of 1910. Jeanette Ingold deftly switches perspectives throughout the tale to keep the reader interested in this well-crafted historical novel.

Jarrett, the brother of a forest ranger, is on a quest to prove himself to his gruff father; Lizbeth, living with her widowed aunt, wants to preserve her adopted Western home; and Seth, a young black soldier, is dedicated to serving his country and overcoming racial prejudice. Apart and together, they transcend traditional teenage roles and attempt to save their homes from the fires that ravaged the Montana and Idaho wilderness during the summer of 1910. Some of the plot developments may seem cliché (romance blooms where you'd probably expect --- close calls end with last-second rescues, etc.), but overall the adventure is unlike any other book available. This overlooked event in US history provides a wealth of excitement for a talented writer. The parallel stories of the three protagonists allow for several viewpoints of every episode; Ingold paints a comprehensive portrait of the true historical events of the period.

Ingold intersperses the chapters with "field notes" chronicling the wildfires and wilderness firefighting from an objective standpoint. These sections are actually where she writes best and they are a testament to the thorough research that went into writing the book. Both historically accurate and dramatically engaging, THE BIG BURN is a great choice for anyone who is interested in learning about the phenomena of forest fires while also reading a great story.

--- Reviewed by Lowell Putnam
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE BIG BURN., March 2, 2003
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Big Burn (Hardcover)
Tittle The Big Burn,author Jeanette Ingold. The big burn was a sad story. The setting of the story was in 1918 in Idaho. The main character in the book were Lizbeth because she save her aunt from the fire. My favorite part of the book is when uncle Mark saves lizbeth from the bid fire and Lizbeth died because she had got burned.There's nothing left in the forest and there is nothing left everywhere, no houses, no trees, and no grass. In this book you can really picture the sights and smells during the catastrophe.I would recomend this book to kids that are in 8th grade because this is a book that kids under 13 might not understand because this book is so sad at the end.
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The Big Burn
The Big Burn by Jeanette Ingold (Paperback - August 1, 2003)
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