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Review of Ben Rogers’ ‘The Flamer’
I reviewed Ben Rogers’ hilarious debut novel The Flamer for the High Country News. I’m working on an interview with Rogers and two other debut Nevada authors for this year’s fall books issue of the High Country News—check in September for that. Here’s how my review begins:
The Flamer
Ben Rogers
257 pages, softcover: $14.
Aqueous Books, 2012.
Ben Rogers’ engaging first novel, The Flamer, is the coming-of-age story of a young Nevada pyromaniac named Oby Brooks. Oby discovers his love for conflagrations when his father donates the family’s dilapidated house to the Reno Fire Department to burn “for training purposes.” The boy watches the fire, riveted: “A dragon was eating my house and I couldn’t tear my eyes away.”
The trajectory of Oby’s life becomes even clearer once he steals some pure sodium from Mr. Weisgard, a scientist visiting his class. He smuggles it home, where it ignites his fireworks-packed closet. “That closet of yours,” his dad fumes during the chaos, “it’s like a munitions locker.”
But there’s no evil intent behind Oby’s obsession — he just likes to blow stuff up. Weisgard sentences Oby to kitchen duty while he tutors him in chemistry; Oby even wins several Boy Scout merit badges. As the boy’s probation ends, Mr. Weisgard encourages him to nurture his interest in science and explosions. “Nevada’s full of things that need blowing up,” Mr. Weisgard observes, and helps Oby find a summer internship at a quarry. The author’s talent for humor and characterization reach their height in the novel’s quarry section, where a whole cast of colorful yet believable characters welcome Oby and initiate him into the secrets of their peculiar world.
Please click through to read the rest:
http://www.hcn.org/issues/44.13/practical-pyromania-a-review-of-the-flamer
Source: hcn.org