There Was a Fire Here

“What would you take with you if your house was about to burn? What would you regret leaving behind? Risa Nye’s searing memoir of loss is ostensibly about objects―the pictures, the shoes, the beloved baby blanket―but it’s really about the love that holds a family together in its darkest moments. Told with humor and grace, Nye’s story demands that we each take a moral inventory, then hold on tight to what truly matters most.”
—Zac Unger, Oakland firefighter, and author of Working Fire

Less than a month before her 40th birthday, a devastating firestorm destroys Risa Nye’s home and neighborhood in Oakland, California. Already mourning the perceived loss of her youth, she now must face the loss of all tangible reminders of who she was before.

There Was a Fire Here is the story of how Nye adjusts to the turning point that will forever mark the “before and after” in her life—and a chronicle of her attempts to honor the lost symbols of her past even as she struggles to create a new home for her family.

Author: Risa Nye

Publication Date: May 16, 2016

 

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“What would you take with you if your house was about to burn? What would you regret leaving behind? Risa Nye’s searing memoir of loss is ostensibly about objects―the pictures, the shoes, the beloved baby blanket―but it’s really about the love that holds a family together in its darkest moments. Told with humor and grace, Nye’s story demands that we each take a moral inventory, then hold on tight to what truly matters most.”
—Zac Unger, Oakland firefighter, and author of Working Fire

“As Nye vividly and poignantly details the physical and emotional devastation of the 1991 fire that razed her home, erased her community, and reduced her memories to ‘a past with nothing left to mark its presence,’ she compels each of us to wonder, What would I take? How would I bear up? What does home mean to me?”
—Jill Smolowe, author of Four Funerals and a Wedding: Resilience in a Time of Grief

“Risa Nye’s lyrical, literate and beguiling voice ignites the fear of fire, love for children, and our powerful attachments to home and neighbors. With radiant language that describes the devastating Oakland hills firestorm, she hastens the pulse as an unstoppable catastrophe threatens all and alters reality. With fine memory, this remarkable writer brings us into the intimacy of sudden loss, the wonder of precious family, and the vibrancy of hope.”
—Gus Lee, best-selling author of China Boy and With Schwarzkopf

“You can go home again, as Risa Nye demonstrates in this memoir of before-and-after the Great Oakland Firestorm of 1991which destroyed over 3000 homes. While her blue house with a white door and daffodils in front was a still smoldering mess, she and her husband determined they’d build it back. Home became homecoming, and now with this artful tale Nye embroiders her own life story anew with loving recollections of unique artifacts lost, from her pale pink wedding dress to a secret box of letters between herself and her husband. Home again, with memories of happy earlier days, of devastating loss and the strengths that can arise from adversity.”
—Deirdre English, Professor, Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley

About the Author

Risa Nye is a lifelong resident of the San Francisco Bay Area. She attended the University of California, and earned master’s degrees at both California State University East Bay and Saint Mary’s College of California (MFA). Her articles and essays have appeared in a number of local and national publications, as well as in several anthologies. A coeditor of the anthology Writin’ on Empty: Parents Reveal the Upside, Downside, and Everything In Between When Children Leave the Nest, she also recently published an e-book based on her blog called Zero to Sixty in One Year: An Easy Month-by-Month Guide to Writing Your Life Story. She lives in Oakland, CA with her husband. Her writing can be found at www.risanye.com.

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