Review: Burn

Burn

Burn
By Peter Heller
Knopf, 9780593801628, August 2024, 304 pp.

The Short of It:

A stark warning to a divided country.

The Rest of It:

I’ve read a few books by Heller and all of them have left me a little speechless. All powerful, all a bit unsettling but this one, wow, I gotta take a moment.

In Burn, Storey and Jess start their annual hunting trip as they always do, except as they hike through Maine, they come across some alarming things. Maine is in the throes of secession and as they come across each town, they see the horrible devastation of what’s left behind. Evidence of a burn, evidence of attack. None of it good. As they make their way across the country, they begin to wonder what has happened back at home. Are their families safe? Surely, help would have been sent.

They quickly realize that their goal is simply survival, and getting back home but the enemy is not clear cut. They can’t tell secessionists from the military and everyone is fighting for supplies. As the journey continues, food is scarce, and mechanisms for getting home are scarce too. Boats? Not in the greatest shape and too obvious on the water. By foot? Long. Too long. They witness horrible things. No one can be trusted. They are on their own.

Enter a lost little girl.

Still unsure if there is even anything to go back to, home seems like such an elusive thing but then here is this girl, only six years old, desperately wanting to be with her parents. Are they even alive? How has she survived so far? Worried about their own survival but unable to leave a child to fend for herself in this bombed-out world, they take her on and their mission changes.

This story is bleak. There is little hope and honestly, it felt a little exhausting to be on this journey with Storey and Jess. All of the “what ifs” kept going through my mind . What would happen today if something like this happened? Could it? I feel as if it absolutely can which made it even more difficult to read.

Heller’s writing here is a warning. A warning that a divided country cannot win. How do you feel about that? I read this alongside my 1984 (read-along) and man, it put me in a dark place.  And I kid you not, as I was typing this out, I received a phone call from the UNITED STATES. Probably spam but chilling. Like, hello, your country is calling you!

Ahem, If you love Heller, you will also appreciate this book but it’s bleak. You should know that going in. Lots to consider here. Would make a good discussion book.

Source: Borrowed
Disclosure: This post contains Bookshop.org affiliate links.

9 thoughts on “Review: Burn”

  1. Oh my, combining this with 1984 cannot possibly have put you in the right mind for Christmas! Quick! Read something fluffy 🙂

    Merry Christmas, Ti! have a great time with the kids.

    1. My last book of the year was another bleak one, which will post Thursday. Excellent though. All the Water In the World.

      My son and his cat just landed. The cat is taking up my lap. She is so sweet.

  2. I do enjoy Heller’s novels and will most certainly get this one read in 2025. Sounds as if it’s as bleak as Cormac McCarthy’s “The Road.” Definitely not something I want to read until after the holidays!

  3. You are reading many apocalyptic / dystopian novels these days! You are brave. I’ve had to step back a bit from such reads post-election. But I had my husband read this one earlier in the year. Not sure what he thought — maybe he thought it got a bit silly … but I think it seems civil war is a scary thought or plausibility.

    1. I’ve always been a full immersion reader. During COVID I read The Plague, The Stand, watched Outbreak.

      After this train wreck of an election I am doing the same. I am moving on now.

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