Wildfire days A woman, a hotshot crew, and the burning American West

Kelly Ramsey, 1981-

Book - 2025

"When Kelly Ramsey drives over a California mountain pass to join an elite firefighting crew, she's terrified that she won't be able to keep up with the intense demands of the job. Not only will she be the only woman on this hotshot crew and their first in ten years, she'll also be among the oldest. As she trains relentlessly to overcome the crew's skepticism and gain their respect, megafires erupt across the West, posing an increasing danger both on the job and back home. In vivid prose that evokes the majesty of Northern California's forests, Kelly takes us on the ground to see how major wildfires are fought and to lay bare the psychological toll, the bone-deep weariness, and the unbreakable camaraderie that ...emerge in the face of nature's fury. Despite the wear and tear of her rookie year in fire, Kelly gears up for a second season, determined to prove that not only can a woman survive this work, she can excel. But when her plans to marry her partner start to crumble and sparks fly with a fellow crew member, Kelly wrestles with whether she's truly outgrown the self-destructive patterns she learned from her father, whose drinking and itinerant ways haunt her. And as the season wears on, she discovers how tenuous "belonging" can be amid ever-changing crew dynamics. In this vivid, visceral, and intimate memoir, Kelly wrestles with the immense power of fire for both destruction and renewal, confronted with the questions: Which fires do you fight, and which do you let burn you clean?"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Scribner 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Kelly Ramsey, 1981- (author)
Edition
First Scribner hardcover edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781668031476
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A hotshot firefighter recounts seasons in the burning wilderness. In 2018, having ended a relationship and looking for a new life, Ramsey wound up in a Northern California hamlet called Happy Camp ("Yes, that's a place"). There, in the formidable tangle of rivers, canyons, and mountains along the Klamath, she found the town in a "biblical crisis" of wildfire, and she volunteered to fight it. Not long after, she was offered a paying position with the U.S. Forest Service, training as a wildland firefighter after passing some tough tests; as her fellow firefighters, all men, learned, she was not just a woman but also much older than they--old enough, she reckons, that if she were an athlete she would have aged out. "Just me and nineteen men who were probably faster, stronger, and more knowledgeable than I was," she writes. "No big deal." Undaunted, she met the challenges of firefighting, which include having to pack heavy equipment into remote places, many reachable only on foot, to say nothing of working under cruel conditions: "There was no hiding from the sun, a punishing tyrant that baked our skin….The rocks were secondary suns radiating heat upward, so we were seared evenly, top and bottom, unhappy steaks." Ramsey is as agile a writer as she was a firefighter, with a welcome sense of humor, as when she writes of a beetle species that can sense wildfires from 100 miles away and swarm there to deposit their eggs in the smoldering wood, safe from predators: "How metal is that?" Eventually, during the Covid-19 pandemic and a year of "millions of acres of the planet I love burning before my eyes," Ramsey realized that her body was beginning to falter under the strains of the work and, with regret, retired from a job she had come to love. A welcome addition to the burgeoning literature of fire. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.