The Great Fire is the winner of the 2003 National Book Award for
Fiction.
More than twenty years after the classic The Transit of Venus,
Shirley Hazzard returns to fiction with a novel that in the words of Ann
Patchett "is brilliant and dazzling..."
The Great Fire is an extraordinary love story set in the immediate
aftermath of the great conflagration of the Second World War. In
war-torn Asia and stricken Europe, men and women, still young but
veterans of harsh experience, must reinvent their lives and
expectations, and learn, from their past, to dream again. Some will
fulfill their destinies, others will falter. At the center of the story,
a brave and brilliant soldier finds that survival and worldly
achievement are not enough. His counterpart, a young girl living in
occupied Japan and tending her dying brother, falls in love, and in the
process discovers herself.
In the looming shadow of world enmities resumed, and of Asia's coming
centrality in world affairs, a man and a woman seek to recover
self-reliance, balance, and tenderness, struggling to reclaim their
humanity. The Great Fire is a story of love in the aftermath of war by
"purely and simply, one of the greatest writers working in English
today." (Michael Cunningham)