Home Fires

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Overview

Anne Davis has returned to the house where she grew up, trading her glamorous Manhattan lifestyle for a harsh winter on a wind-whipped New England island. Her marriage has crumbled in the wake of a tragic accident. Now she has returned to the home on Salt Whistle Raod that has always meant shelter, security, family and love. When she awakens one snowy night to a fire that roars through the old house, Anne escapes--but runs back into the blaze to save something so precious that it's worth risking her life for. It is that reckless act of blind desperation that sets a miracle in motion.

Seeking refuge from the pain of a collapsed marriage, Anne Davis returned to Salt Whistle Road. There, she hoped to find solace in the old house that always symbolized security and love. As a fire raged through the house and was about to engulf what little comfort she had left, Anne raced back into the inferno to rescue something more precious than life itself. It was an act that gave birth to a miracle, and, for Anne, a new life.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly
A young woman who is emotionally scarred by the death of her daughter gets a second chance at love. (June)
Library Journal
Rice's Blue Moon was a tad weak, and LJ readers were advised to "wait for her next novel" (LJ 8/93). Here it is. Home Fires tells of a tragedy-prone woman who learns to love again.
Joanne Wilkinson
After witnessing the death of her four-year-old daughter, Karen, in a tragic accident, Anne Davis returns to the New England island where she grew up. When a fire threatens to consume the family home, Anne reenters the house in search of her dead daughter's most treasured possessions. Overcome by smoke, she is rescued by Thomas Devlin, a grotesquely scarred firefighter who recognizes in Anne a fellow survivor. The two kindred souls start a tenuous relationship, but Thomas' jealous son and Anne's cold ex-husband attempt to derail their romance. This 1990s version of the Beauty and the Beast story has many fine touches--the way Karen's winsome crayon drawing becomes her mother's talisman; Anne's sister's barely suppressed envy of Anne's glamorous life; troubled teen Maggie's start-and-stop efforts to straighten out her life. But Rice blows a good deal of credibility by loading down her plot with one tragic event after another. This fairy tale would have you believe that you can find love in a dangerous world, but you'd better have plenty of fire and auto insurance

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780553573220
  • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
  • Publication date: 7/28/1996
  • Format: Mass Market Paperback
  • Edition description: Reprint
  • Pages: 320
  • Sales rank: 311,543
  • Product dimensions: 4.01 (w) x 6.91 (h) x 1.06 (d)

Meet the Author

Luanne Rice
Luanne Rice
Luanne Rice is the author, most recently, of Last Kiss and Light of the Moon, among many other New York Times bestsellers. She lives in New York City and on the Connecticut shore.

From the Trade Paperback edition.

Biography

Luanne Rice is the New York Times- bestselling author who has inspired the devotion of readers everywhere with her moving novels of love and family. She has been hailed by critics for her unique gifts, which have been described as "a beautiful blend of love and humor, with a little magic thrown in."

Rice began her writing career in 1985 with her debut novel Angels All Over Town. Since then, she has gone on to pen a string of heartwarming bestsellers. Several of her books have been adapted for television, including Crazy in Love, Blue Moon, Follow the Stars Home, and Beach Girls.

Rice was born in New Britain, Connecticut, where her father sold typewriters and her mother, a writer and artist, taught English. Throughout her childhood, Rice spent winters in New Britain and summers by Long Island Sound in Old Lyme, where her mother would hold writing workshops for local children. Rice's talent emerged at a very young age, and her first short story was published in American Girl Magazinewhen she was 15.

Rice later attended Connecticut College, but dropped out when her father became very ill. At this point, she knew she wanted to be a writer. Instead of returning to college, Rice took on many odd jobs, including working as a cook and maid for an exalted Rhode Island family, as well as fishing on a scallop boat during winter storms. These life experiences not only cultivated the author's love and talent for writing, but shaped the common backdrops in her novels of family and relationships on the Eastern seaboard. A true storyteller with a unique ability to combine realism and romance, Rice continues to enthrall readers with her luminous stories of life's triumphs and challenges.

Good To Know

Some interesting outtakes from our interview with Luanne:

"I take guitar lessons."

  • "I was queen of the junior prom. Voted in, according to one high school friend I saw recently, as a joke because my date and I were so shy, everyone thought it would be hilarious to see us onstage with crowns on our heads. It was 1972, and the theme of the prom was Color My World. For some reason I told my guitar teacher that story, and he said Yeah, color my world with goat's blood."

  • "I shared a room with both sisters when we were little, and I felt sorry for kids who had their own rooms."

  • "To support myself while writing in the early days, I worked as a maid and cook in one of the mansions in Newport, Rhode Island. I'd learned to love to cook in high school, by taking French cooking from Sister Denise at the convent next door to the school. The family I worked for didn't like French cooking and preferred broiled meat, well done, and frozen vegetables. They were particular about the brand—they liked the kind with the enclosed sauce packet. My grandmother Mim, who'd always lived with us, had taken the ferry from Providence to Newport every weekend during her years working at the hosiery factory, so being in that city made me feel connected to her."

  • "I lived in Paris. The apartment was in the Eighth Arrondissement. Every morning I'd take my dog for a walk to buy the International Herald Tribune and have coffee at a café around the corner. Then I'd go upstairs to the top floor, where I'd converted one of the old servant's rooms into a writing room, and write. For breaks I'd walk along the Seine and study my French lesson. Days of museums, salons du thé, and wandering the city. Living in another country gave me a different perspective on the world. I'm glad I realized there's not just one way to see things.

    While living there, I found out my mother had a brain tumor. She came to Paris to stay with me and have chemotherapy at the American Hospital. She'd never been on a plane before that trip. In spite of her illness, she loved seeing Paris. I took her to London for a week, and as a teacher of English and a lover of Dickens, that was her high point.

    After she died, I returned to France and made a pilgrimage to the Camargue, in the South. It is a mystical landscape of marsh grass, wild bulls, and white horses. It is home to one of the largest nature sanctuaries in the world, and I saw countless species of birds. The town of Stes. Maries de la Mer is inspiring beyond words. Different cultures visit the mysterious Saint Sarah, and the presence of the faithful at the edge of the sea made me feel part of something huge and eternal. And all of it inspired my novel Light of the Moon."

  • "I dedicated a book to Bruce Springsteen. It's The Secret Hour, which at first glance isn't a novel you'd connect with him—the novel is about a woman whose sister might or might not have been taken by a serial killer. I wrote it during a time when I felt under siege, and I used those deeply personal feelings for my fiction. Bruce was touring and I was attending his shows with a good friend. The music and band and Bruce and my friend made me feel somehow accompanied and lightened as I went through that time and reached into those dark places.

    During that period I also wrote two linked books—Summer's Childand Summer of Roses. They deal with the harsh reality of domestic violence and follow The Secret Hour and The Perfect Summer When I look back at those books, that time of my life, I see myself as a brave person. Instead of hiding from painful truths, I tried to explore and bring them to the light through my fiction. During that period, I met amazing women and became involved with trying to help families affected by abuse—in particular, a group near my small town in Connecticut, and Deborah Epstein's domestic violence clinic at Georgetown University Law Center. I learned that emotional abuse leaves no overt outward scars, but wounds deeply, in ways that take a long time to heal. A counselor recommended The Verbally Abusive Relationshipby Patricia Evans. It is life-changing, and I have given it to many women over the years."

  • "I became a vegetarian. I decided that, having been affected by brutality, I wanted only gentleness and peace in my life. Having experienced fear, I knew I could never willingly inflict harm or fear on another creature. All is related. A friend reminds me of a great quote in the Zen tradition: "How you do anything is how you do everything."
      1. Date of Birth:
        September 25, 1955
      2. Place of Birth:
        New Britain, CT

    Read an Excerpt

    The fire started in the tangled old wires behind the bathroom heater.  At first there was no flame, only a core of intense heat.  The wires' frayed insulation, gray weave with the texture of a man's jacket, began to smolder. One spark popped, then another.  The orange line crackled to the panel board, causing a momentary blink of the house's microwave, stereo, television, and alarm clocks.

    In that instant the portable phone beside Anne Davis's bed clicked, resetting itself Usually the sound would awaken her, but tonight it barely penetrated her deep sleep.  She had been traveling all day; it had been months since she had slept well.  She half turned toward the bedside table, but she was engulfed in a sweet dream that would not release her.

    Tendrils of blue smoke wisped through the wallboards three rooms away.  They dissipated like ghosts into the thin winter air.  Flames licked the wall from behind, trying to follow the smoke.  They raced in all directions, searching for cracks.  One line of fire spawned another, and another, all crazy to escape.  They filled the space like agitated spectators in an arena crammed beyond its capacity.  They sped down the wires, and that was all it took.  When the electrical system exploded, the flames burst through the wall in one thunderous blast.  The house was on fire.

    It was another Karen dream that enveloped Anne as she slept.  A dream of hazy images, clear bliss.  Karen in her arms.  At the beach, with Matt nearby.  The sun's heat sensual and intense.  Anne's nose pressed against Karen's skin, the spot where her neck and shoulder met, smelling of summer.  Baby sweat, Coppertone SPF 40, salt water, chocolate from a Good Humor bar.  Karen's weight on Anne's lap, and the sound of waves lapping the shore.

    A clack.  Sounds from the outside world.

    Anne shifted, her face burrowing into the pillow, anything to preserve the dream.  The family on summer vacation.  Matt, Karen, and Anne together on a beach blanket.  The hot summer day: she had it back, that feeling of joy and closeness.  It was perfect, and so very real.  She could touch Matt's leg, lick salt grains from the nape of Karen's neck.  All her senses were awake; contentment throbbed through her body like lifeblood.

    Then the house exploded.

    Anne jumped out of bed.  For a second she didn't know where she was.  She started for Karen's bedroom, just yards away, then realized she wasn't in their New York apartment.  She had come to the island, to her family home, the place where she'd grown up.

    Smoke drifted in from the hall, under the closed bedroom door.  Shivering in the dark, Anne touched the door with her hand.  It felt scorching hot. Grabbing a bureau scarf, she wrapped it around the brass knob and pushed.  Fire roared inward, burning her hand as she slammed the door.

    She ran to the window and saw the snow glistening orange a long drop below. Her room was on the second floor, and the land sloped steeply away.  In the distance, coming from town, she heard a siren.  She returned to the door and touched the knob, as if to check that it hadn't somehow, incredibly, cooled down.  Then, with no other choice, she turned back to the window.

    "Karen," she said, choking with smoke and panic.  There was no time to tie bedsheets together, no time to wait for the Island Volunteer Fire Department. She opened the window and looked down.  Height, even this twenty-foot height, terrified her.  She gulped air, but the smoke was catching up with her.  She could jump out the window, she thought, then reenter the house by the porch door.

    Climbing over the sill in her white nightgown, she let herself hang against the side of the house.  It took forever to summon the power it took to let go. Don't think about it, she told herself.  You have to do this.  Jump.  Jump. Finally her fingers obeyed.  With bare feet she kicked off.  Her eyes were closed.  She tried to forget she was falling.  A snowcapped yew bush broke her landing, and she rolled a few yards down the hill before she could stop herself.

    Flames had broken through the bathroom roof, and the west upstairs windows glowed.  Sirens screamed down Salt Whistle Road.  Before Anne reached the porch, she heard men shouting, spools creaking as the hoses were unwound. Suddenly her mind was clear, and a superhuman burst of will propelled her across the yard, across the porch floor.

    "Stop! Don't go in there," someone called.  Anne glanced over her shoulder at the fire truck and saw a big man running toward her.  He towered over everyone: a giant in black rubber coat, Star Wars mask, and yellow fireman's hat.

    Anne rattled the door.  Locked.  She let out a cry of panic and frustration. From a nest of dry brown leaves she grabbed a smooth rock painted with the dark spars of a sailing ship by Anne herself, at age seven, and used by the family ever since as a doorstop.  Smashing it through a pane of glass, she reached inside to find the dead bolt.

    "Please, no!" the man shouted, running closer.  Anne's hand shaking, she glanced back again.  He had flipped the mask up, and

    Anne was shocked to see that his left cheek was melted, like wax on a candlestick.  His eyes had battle in them--urgency and alarm.

    If he wanted to stop her, he was Anne's enemy.  Moaning with panic, she groped for the dead bolt.  Finding it, she gave it a turn.  And then she was inside.

    Thomas X. Devlin of the Island Volunteer Fire Department stood outside the old house on Salt Whistle Road, watching black smoke seep through the attic vents. Flames lit the west windows on the second floor.  He felt a shiver go down his spine, the way it always did at a fire ground.  His skin grafts felt stiff, and he flexed his hands a few times, getting ready to work.

    Car and truckloads of volunteers were streaming around the marsh, sounding a cacophony of air horns and sirens, a parade of pulsating blue strobe lights. Martin Cole lined up the cherry picker and Thomas Devlin was reaching for the roof saw when he spied the woman.

    With her black hair and white nightgown, she was nearly invisible against the snow and night sky.  She staggered up the hill, seeming to sway for an instant before charging onto the porch with the force of a locomotive and the grace of an apparition.  Thomas Devlin shouted to her.

    She glanced over her shoulder, and he bounded off the truck.  She was trying the door, searching the porch for something.  She was on a rescue mission; he saw it in her eyes.  He crossed the yard in four strides, his arms out to catch her before she entered the burning house.

    He called again, but a patch of ice tripped him up.  He stumbled, just missed falling, heard the glass break.  When he looked up, she had disappeared into the smoke.

    Where was she heading? Upstairs? To a bedroom for a sleeping husband? Child? He'd seen the mad look in her eyes during the split second she'd glanced back. The woman had appeared small, desperate, and breathless.  She wouldn't have much time before the smoke got to her.  Thomas Devlin felt for his regulator, pulled down his face mask, and entered the house.  No newcomer to fire, he had been a paid firefighter in Boston before coming to the island ten years ago. But every fire was new, every fire could mean death.

    Blue-and-red strobe lights bounced through the smoke until he was three feet inside, and then everything was black.  He crawled into the room, his breath through the air mask sounding artificial, like an iron lung.  He envisioned the house's floor plan; he had been in plenty like it.  It was the design of choice for working-class island families during the thirties, a tinderbox built to withstand hurricanes.

    He fixed on the stairs, where he figured she was heading.  Moving toward the fire, he heard something drop to the floor off to his left.  He changed direction.  Feeling his way along the wall, he touched her body before he saw her.  He swooped her off the floor and cradled her in his arms.  Through his thick rubber coat, he felt her chest rise and fall.

    Outside, he held her close, to protect her from the bitter cold.  Away from the smoke, he could see she was clutching a diaper bag.  By the way she lay limp in his arms, he knew she was unconscious.  Firefighters and police-band groupies milled around; Sarah Tisdale came running with blankets and a tank of

    "Anyone else inside?" Brian Grisky shouted.

    "She went back after something," Thomas Devlin said.

    He laid her on one blanket and covered her with another while Sarah placed the oxygen mask over her face.  Gently, he pried the bag from her hands, intending to look for clues.  At the sight of the stuffed toy, the tiny dresses and sweater, his heart began to race.  Almost instantly, she came to.  She struggled to rise, then fell back.  Her hand reached for the bag.

    "There's a child inside the house?" he asked, shaking the woman's shoulder. "Where? Tell me where!"

    The woman blinked, trying to swallow.  She pushed the oxygen mask away.  "The house is empty," she croaked.

    "It's empty," Brian called out.  "All clear!"

    Soot coated the woman's pale face, making it nearly as dark as her hair.  The smoke had swollen her eyes nearly shut.  But even though she was half-frozen, half-asphyxiated, Thomas Devlin could see that she was lovely.  She had a small body, but only a heart of steel could have made her enter that burning house.

    "Where's the child?" he asked, watching her fumble through the soiled diaper bag.  She suddenly regained the air of panic he had seen about her when he had thought she was on a mission of rescue.  Her eyes darted back and forth, from one side of the bag to the other.  She bit her lower lip.

    And then she had it: the moment of relief She threw her head back, then raised it again to look.  Her hand closed around something, withdrawing it from the bag.  A crumpled sheet of manila paper, one side covered with crayon marks. Tears squeezed out of the corners of her eyes.

    "The child?" he asked again, more softly.

    "There is no child," the woman answered, and she turned her head away.

    Customer Reviews

    Average Rating 4.5
    ( 10 )

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    Sort by: Showing 1 – 12 of 11 Customer Reviews
    • Posted May 8, 2010

      I Also Recommend:

      Heartwarming Thriller!

      This novel has several stories going on that blend together wonderfully.
      There are some mysteries, love stories and action that kept me engrossed in the book.
      I loved the description of Thomas, the good solid man, and how he affects Anne. Also, the slow friendship that bonds Maggie and Ned plays out a at good pace.
      There is some really scary parts to the book, but fortunately, it adds more action than terror.
      Overall, this book was very well-written and painted realistic feelings and relationships.

      1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

      Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
    • Anonymous

      Posted December 16, 2005

      Reader from Montreal, Canada

      What a wonderful story. Being the mom of 2 teenagers, I could relate and understand Gabrielle and Maggie's relationship.Another touching story from Luanne Rice.

      1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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    • Anonymous

      Posted June 14, 2003

      must read

      great like so many of her others. Make time for it this summer!

      1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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    • Anonymous

      Posted August 13, 2002

      Great Book!

      If you haven't read Luanne Rice, you are missing out! I discovered that a little while back, and I am in the process of reading her whole collection. I've yet to be disappointed. This is a great love story, a story about re-building, a story of tragedy & moving on. It's also about growing up & making life choices. I couldn't put it down.

      1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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    • Anonymous

      Posted December 6, 2007

      Home Fires

      I like this a lot. It made me laugh, made me sad...it was really good. I like how descriptive Rice is, she really puts you right there with the characters and makes it real. This was a good book.

      Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
    • Anonymous

      Posted December 4, 2001

      Really fun and enjoyable

      I thought it was a light, fun read. The story was good, a little corny and melodramatic but I really enjoyed it.

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    • Anonymous

      Posted April 16, 2011

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