Little Fires Everywhere book cover

Little Fires Everywhere

Riverhead Books · 2017 · 338 pages
ISBN: 9780735224292
Review Editor admin

Celeste Ng’s Little Fires Everywhere is the kind of novel that reads like a page-turner while doing the work of serious literary fiction. Published in 2017 and set in Shaker Heights, Ohio – the carefully planned, deliberately integrated suburb where Ng grew up – it tells the story of two families whose collision exposes the limits of liberal good intentions, the class and racial assumptions embedded in the American ideal of order, and the ways mothers and daughters fail each other in the particular ways that love makes possible.

What Happens in Little Fires Everywhere

Elena Richardson is a newspaper journalist, Shaker Heights institution, and mother of four children who live by the rules she has always trusted. When a mysterious artist named Mia Warren and her teenage daughter Pearl arrive in Shaker Heights and rent Elena’s property, the two families gradually become entangled in ways neither anticipated. Pearl falls into the Richardson orbit, dazzled by their certainty and their things. Elena becomes increasingly obsessed with Mia’s past, which Mia has carefully erased.

The novel’s central crisis involves a Chinese American baby named May Ling, abandoned by her birth mother and then adopted by a prosperous Shaker Heights couple, the McCulloughs. When the birth mother, Bebe Chow, a Chinese immigrant who left May Ling in a moment of desperation and then rebuilt her life enough to want her back, sues for custody, the community divides. Mia supports Bebe; Elena supports the McCulloughs. The legal case focuses the novel’s questions about race, class, and the meaning of family into a specific, urgent form.

The novel is told from multiple perspectives and moves backward in time as well as forward, revealing what each character knows and what they have hidden. The structure is elegant and controlled; Ng releases information at exactly the right pace to maintain both momentum and depth.

Elena and Mia

The two women are the novel’s engine. Elena has achieved everything her world told her to achieve and believes in the system that rewarded her – except she cannot quite articulate what that system cost, or who it cost. Her obsession with Mia is partly curiosity and partly the discomfort of encountering someone who has chosen differently and does not seem to regret it.

Mia is the novel’s moral center, but not a simple one. She has done things that are questionable. Her commitment to living outside conventional stability has costs that her daughter Pearl feels and that Mia does not always acknowledge. She is not a saint; she is a person with a fully formed set of values who acts on them, and the novel respects this enough not to make her perfect.

Shaker Heights as Argument

Ng uses the specific history and ideology of Shaker Heights – a community that planned its integration, that has rules about housing and behavior that are meant to produce harmony – as a setting that embodies and complicates the novel’s concerns. The rules of Shaker Heights are well-intentioned. They also enforce a kind of sameness that excludes the people who cannot or will not conform to them. The novel asks what good intentions cost people who are not invited to design the intentions.

Who This Book Is For

Readers interested in novels about race and class in contemporary America, about the specific dynamics between women and mothers, or simply about how communities handle disruption will find Little Fires Everywhere both satisfying and challenging. It is a novel that reads quickly and stays long.

Is Little Fires Everywhere set in a real place?
Yes. Shaker Heights, Ohio, is a real suburb of Cleveland with the actual history the novel describes: it was one of the first planned integrated communities in the United States and has specific rules about housing maintenance and community standards.
Is there a TV adaptation?
Yes. A Hulu miniseries starring Reese Witherspoon as Elena and Kerry Washington as Mia premiered in 2020 and received strong reviews. It changes several elements of the novel, including race-swapping some characters and adding backstory, but maintains the central conflicts.
What does the title mean?
The title comes from a line near the end of the novel about how destruction can be the beginning of something new. The fires of the title are both literal (there is a fire in the novel) and figurative: the disruptions that Mia’s presence causes in Shaker Heights and in the Richardson family.
How does race function in the novel?
The novel is very specifically about race in a liberal community that believes it has resolved the race question through integration and good intentions. It argues that these intentions do not dissolve the structural advantages of whiteness or the vulnerabilities of non-whiteness, and that believing they do can be its own form of harm.
Is the custody case based on a real story?
The custody dispute involving a Chinese American baby is fictional, but Ng has said it was inspired by real cases involving international and transracial adoption. The questions the case raises are ones that real courts and communities have faced.
Is Elena the villain?
Elena is not a villain. She is a person who has made choices that seemed right and who cannot understand why they feel wrong to others. The novel does not excuse her, but it also does not write her as simply bad. Her failures are the failures of a specific kind of well-intentioned blindness.
Does the novel have a satisfying ending?
The ending is emotionally honest rather than conventionally satisfying. It distributes consequences without imposing a lesson. Readers who want resolution will find it partial; readers who want accuracy will find it right.
How does Little Fires Everywhere compare to Everything I Never Told You?
Both novels are set in Ohio and deal with Chinese-American family experience, but they operate in very different registers. Everything I Never Told You is more focused, more psychological, and more tragic; Little Fires Everywhere is more expansive, more social, and more interested in community as a force. Both are excellent, and either can be read first.

Book Details

Title
Little Fires Everywhere
Author
Celeste Ng
Publisher
Riverhead Books
Year Published
2017
Pages
338
ISBN
9780735224292
WritersReview Rating
4.0 / 5