Showing posts with label Bushfires. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bushfires. Show all posts

Monday, March 28, 2022

Burnt Out

The 2019-2020 bushfires raged through many parts of Australia including the Blue Mountains, west of Sydney. Calida Lyons had the car packed ready to leave her home in case of fire but was still unprepared when the fire approached her local community. Fortunately she was rescued by a neighbour whose house survived but Calida lost everything.

When interviewed by an opportunistic TV reporter about how she felt about losing her home, the new book she was writing and her cat, Calida did not hold back making it quite clear that everyone should be doing something about climate change. When her rant went viral Calida became a celebrity and her life suddenly changed. But was she really achieving what she set out to do or was she being manipulated by others with different agendas.

Eventually Calida must decide how she really wants to live her life and who her real friends are.

Burnt Out was one of three books selected as a possible title for the Monash Alumni Book Club, May 2025.

Saturday, March 28, 2020

The Arsonist

On 7 February 2009 approximately 400 bushfires broke out in the state of Victoria. Among the devastation caused by the fires, 173 people died and 2,029 homes were lost. Some of the bushfires were started by arsonists.

The week preceeding the bushfires Victoria experienced a heat wave with temperatures regularly above 40 degrees celsius. On the 7th February the temperature in Melbourne reached 46 degrees. It was hotter in Gippsland. This was also the time of the Millenium Drought (2001-2009).

In The Arsonist: a mind on fire, Chloe Hooper describes the devastation of the fire near Churchill in Gippsland and the attempt to find and prosecute the person who started it. Eleven people died during this fire and 145 homes were destroyed.

The book is divided into three sections - the detectives, the lawyers and the courtroom. The author describes how the police investigated the cause of the fire and how they located the perpetrator. This is followed primarily about the work of the Legal Aid lawyers attempting to build a case to defend the suspect who was autistic. A summary of the court case follows with the verdict. Thoughout the books the author includes descriptions of some of the events that occurred on Black Saturday as people attempted to defend their homes from the inferno and / or escape from the area. Interviews with many of the survivors are included.

This work is a valuable record of how bushfires have a long term impact on communities, families and the state as a whole. It is made all the more relevant considering the severe bushfires that recently occured in eastern Australia including Victoria.

This book was the first title discussed at the RHSV Book Club in March 2020 which I did not attend but I will still try and read the books.

Bushfire - Black Saturday