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The Fires of Edgarville
 
 
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The Fires of Edgarville [Hardcover]

Craig Joseph Danner (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

Price: $24.00 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

April 22, 2009
From the Cover -- Hank Davenport is a man in search of his life. Born just days after the first anniversary of the bombing of Pearl Harbor, he is a Japanese-American raised in the Pacific Northwest by Caucasian parents. A respected and successful pediatrician, his reputation is destroyed when he is accused of mercy-killing a young patient.

Seeking refuge on his adoptive mother's remote and dilapidated orchard, Hank discovers that she is rapidly succumbing to Alzheimer's. Long an outcast from her Mormon family, Myrna herself has only recently returned to the now-failed homestead her father and brothers built and planted when she was a child. As her dementia progresses, her long-held secrets are revealed, and Hank becomes entwined in the mystery of a phantom arsonist plaguing a community that holds the slowly turning key to his past and his future.

Tracing the evolution of a small Oregon lumber town and its connection to the Japanese internment during World War II, The Fires of Edgarville is a spellbinding story told with authentic detail and unexpected humor. Craig Danner's second novel is fast-paced and unflinching in its honesty, while filled with compassion for its original and endearing characters.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

The Fires of Edgarville is not really about solving the mystery of a serial arsonist. It's not really about uncovering the truth behind old family secrets and lies. Or rather, it's about so much more. This is a mystery novel, yes, and a page turner, but one that engages authentically with a dishonorable part of our past, that conjures brilliantly the effects of dementia, that tackles unflinchingly the difficult terrain of families, prejudice, guilt, deception--all the while in fluid, singing prose. I was spellbound. --Molly Gloss, author of The Jump-Off Creek and The Hearts of Horses

The Fires of Edgarville is a daring and enthralling novel with the power to surprise anyone who picks it up. Craig Joseph Danner takes a tiny Northwestern town and two unlikely protagonists -- a defamed Japanese-American doctor and an irascible senile woman -- and somehow turns out high drama. This novel is slender and fast-paced, but the story is rich and artfully woven with dazzling crescendos of action and original characters in search of elusive truths. --Jim Lynch, author of The Highest Tide

Craig Danner has done it again. The Fires of Edgarville is a can't-stop-reading book. A story of mystery, betrayal, bigotry, sex, love, and forgiveness. Books like this are the reason I read. --Alison Clement, author of Pretty Is As Pretty Does and Twenty Questions

About the Author

Craig Danner's first novel, Himalayan Dhaba, won the 2002 ­Pacific Northwest Book Award. He lives in his native Oregon with his wife and two sons, who are encouraging him to write a children's novel.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Crispin/Hammer Publishing; First edition (April 22, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0970640579
  • ISBN-13: 978-0970640574
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,744,397 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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Average Customer Review
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Fires of Edgarville, August 11, 2009
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This review is from: The Fires of Edgarville (Hardcover)
This book is an excellent read, and presents much detailed information about the experiences of Japanese residents of the Pacific North West during, and following World War II. The writer leads one through a series of exciting scenarios involving fire fighting, and caring for a relative with advanced symptoms of Alzheimer's disease. The writer's medical backround and familiarity with orchard management as well as fire fighting comes through with his acuracy and detailed descriptions.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A reader's review of The Fires of Edgarville, August 28, 2009
By 
Kenneth J. Goldman (Short Hills, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Fires of Edgarville (Hardcover)
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. Within a few chapters I got hooked, and when I did, the novel became one of those "difficult-to-put-down" books.

Followed by his faithful dog, aptly named Trouble, the main character, Hank Davenport, finds himself burdened with the care of his senile and enigmatic mother - a woman with a secret. Danner carefully connects scenes from the woman's youth in a Japanese-phobic Oregon in WWII with the current events taking place in the novel and it is not until he has unraveled his own past in an exciting conclusion that Davenport achieves peace.

There is a lot more than just plot in "Fires of Edgarville". There is a blurring of lines between delusion and reality, fantasy and fact. One finds a bit of "magical realism" with the amazing image of the deceased buck springing to life and leaping into the woods with its antlers alight.

Another quality of this book is that the narrative pays careful attention to the physical environment. It is written by a person who loves nature, and descriptions of the valley, the wind, the snow, and the mountain views are inspired.

Craig Danner deserves credit for writing a great book. It is an impressive work of fiction I hope will be enjoyed by many.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Morman girl in small town Oregon -- a must read, October 9, 2009
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This review is from: The Fires of Edgarville (Hardcover)
A Mormon girl in small town Oregon confronts prejudice against Japanese Americans during World War II.

The Fires of Edgarville by Craig Joseph Danner is a poetic and absorbing tale of two outcasts, looking for themselves: Myrna, raised Mormon, a courageous survivor of brutal prejudice during World War II who is now lost in Alzheimer's, and her half-Japanese son, Hank, a doctor accused of a terrible crime, struggling to unravel the convoluted mystery of his ethnicity.

Hank and Myrna have returned with Hank's wife to Myrna's family home in small town Oregon, where the pear orchard has rotted, the house is collapsing, and no one but a few old-timers remember that this was once the town of Edgarville. Hank has lost his profession as a pediatric cardiologist, his license snatched away when he is accused of hastening a child's death. With grit and tenacity, Hank sets about rebuilding his life as a volunteer fireman, repairing the homestead, and exploring the minefield of his mother's past.

Myrna proves to be a very difficult woman to live with, dropping into sinkholes in her memory, triggered into explosions by the smells, faces, and landscapes of her violent childhood. Through her eyes the reader grows up again in a repressive Mormon home, falls in love with a Japanese man, and is hideously deserted by her family on the eve of World War II. We see Myrna, a young teenager, going alone into the world, weaving elaborate lies to protect her son, and throwing her body between a hostile America and her tender little boy.

Through Hank's eyes Myrna lives a non sequitur; swearing at her scrambled eggs, laughing into silences, and slapping Hank for things he never did. Between answering calls of the fire siren, Hank fights to keep the confused Myrna safe, outmaneuvering her tendencies to wander and to play with matches, digging deep for every last scrap of compassion he can feel in an effort to not abandon her. It takes the patience of a saint to care for a loved one whose mind is deteriorating, and in the end Hank proves to be only human. But it is his love for his mother, however difficult the circumstance, that leads Hank home to the truth: about himself, his heritage, and his mother's breathtaking courage.

I highly recommend The Fires of Edgarville for the poetry of Mr. Danner's language, the sensuousness of feels, smells, and sights, and the humanity of the tale.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
booster truck, orchard rows
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
The Fires of Edgarville, Edgar Flat, Evan Smith, Fire Chief, Collins Road, Frank Nagoya, Doctor Hank, Brenda Thompson, Martin Capo, Alder Road, Already Hank, Paul Partlow Road, Milky Way, Captain Richardson, Pacific Light, Roger Noji
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