BOOK OF THE WEEK

Fire Weather by John Vaillant review — the 2023 Baillie Gifford Prize winner

A terrifying inside account of a devastating wildfire in Canada shows how dangerous our hotter world is becoming. By Cal Flyn
updated
A highway near Fort McMurray, Canada, on May 7, 2016
A highway near Fort McMurray, Canada, on May 7, 2016
MARK BLINCH/REUTERS

This review was originally published on July 28

In a week where fires blazed out of control across the Mediterranean, killing dozens and forcing the evacuation of tens of thousands, no book feels timelier than John Vaillant’s Fire Weather, a deeply reported narrative of one of Canada’s most destructive recent wildfires. It is also a strongly argued polemic on the culpability of the petrochemical industry in a hotter, increasingly flammable world.

In a cleverly constructed narrative that reads in parts like a Jane Harper thriller, we meet a cast of real-life characters chasing their fortunes in Fort McMurray, a modern boom town built to exploit Alberta’s vast reserves of tar sands. Their lives were upended, sometimes forever, when a wildfire known as MWF-009 ripped