Growing Up in Flames by Zach Jones - ISBN: 9781922458360
Paperback
Grief, secrets, and fire ignite a search for truth and belonging.

Growing Up in Flames

$21.65

  • Paperback

    240 pages

  • Release Date

    1 March 2022

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Summary

This contemporary YA novel tackles grief, belonging, and mental illness.

Kenna’s mother Ava was killed in a bushfire not long ago. Now Kenna’s living with her uncle and his young family in the small town where Ava grew up, and she feels like an intruder.

Noah’s mother has a mental illness that makes him both carer and jailer—constantly watchful, keeping things on an even keel.

One night Kenna sees the general store on fire, and a boy standing watching as it burns. It t…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781922458360
ISBN-10:1922458368
Author:Zach Jones
Publisher:Text Publishing
Imprint:The Text Publishing Company
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:240
Release Date:1 March 2022
Weight:256g
Dimensions:197mm x 129mm x 20mm
Audience Age:15-18
What They're Saying

Critics Review

‘A powerful novel for older readers. The flames and fury of adolescence scorch every page. Try not to get burnt…’

Zach Jones’s debut novel Growing Up in Flames is as gritty as bushfire ash. Written for a doctorate in creative writing at the University of the Sunshine Coast, the novel’s provenance is evident in Jones’s masterly use of the extended metaphor of fire to explore the relationship between intergenerational trauma and adolescent identity formation. In the present day, Kenna is living in what she perceives as exile with her uncle’s family in small-town rural Australia, following the death of her mother Ava in a bushfire. Noah is similarly trapped in Kimba as the sole caregiver for his mentally ill mother. When Kenna catches Noah burning his father’s store to the ground, she finds a new focus for her all-consuming anger. The enmity between Kenna and Noah transforms after Noah’s mother reveals details of Kenna’s own mother’s secret past in Kimba. Kenna’s search for the truth, interspersed with the story of the past unravelled through Ava’s diary entries and chapters from the perspective of her first boyfriend, brings the novel to a crescendo of pain, suffering and regret. In its aftermath, however, there is hope, and some degree of recovery and forgiveness seems possible. This is a confronting but ultimately rewarding read that will appeal to older teenage readers and adults who were moved by Eleni Hale’s Stone Girl. Ilona Urquhart is a children’s and youth services librarian on the Surf Coast and has a PhD in literary studies.

About The Author

Zach Jones

Zach Jones has been an acrobat and a psychologist, and has taught Shakespeare in prisons, but his wife Aneeka is the best thing that ever happened to him. He spends his time running around after their six children and making up stories in his head. He completed his doctorate in Creative Writing at the University of the Sunshine Coast, and now lives on the North Coast of NSW. This is his first novel.

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