Reviews

Heat and Light by Jennifer Haigh

booknrrd's review against another edition

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3.0

A solid 3.5 stars.

Heat & Light follows the people in a small economically depressed Pennsylvania town when a fracking company move in. I was worried that I was going to find it preachy, and I didn't, but then again maybe I'm in the choir?

robinsolomon's review against another edition

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5.0

Jennifer Haigh is one of my favorite authors and Heat & Light does not disappoint. It is an outstanding story about the people in a small rural town in western Pennsylvania. The characters deal with addiction, infidelity, domestic abuse, divorce, environmental activism, personal injury lawyers, etc., in a town that has been targeted for natural gas drilling. Many thanks to Gayle for introducing me to Haigh's books!

cmuir's review against another edition

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3.0

Reminded me of Grisham.
Didn't really connect with the characters.

pallavi_sharma87's review against another edition

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1.0

DNF @40%
REVIEW SOON

runoutofpages's review against another edition

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3.0

Something about this story just didn't click for me. There were a ton of characters and in the end I couldn't really connect or even like any of them. I enjoyed the authors writing style and liked how she handled the science that was discussed.

robinhigdon's review against another edition

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4.0

a good story but also a good insight into fracking which i knew nothing about.

xaviershay's review against another edition

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5.0

plain, simple, and real

sadieruin's review against another edition

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3.0

Set in rural Pennsylvania this novel follows several families as they navigate their way through the conundrum of fracking. Told from multiple perspectives spanning decades it manages to not come off as contrived. The characters have depth and the story is overall well written and researched. A solid summer read or beach book.

lonelytourist's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative reflective medium-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

txreader's review against another edition

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5.0

I won this book through a Goodreads giveaway.

This review has been difficult to formulate, not because of concerns with the caliber of the book but because I’d like to do it justice. With the setting and underlying themes, Ms. Haigh has managed to not only explore her characters with empathy for even minor players but to have their lives reflect so many issues facing us today. This is what good fiction is all about, isn’t it? You become involved in someone else’s story and think more deeply about why people do the inexplicable.

I live in Houston, a place many of the characters call home. I disagree completely with the description of Houston as "a charmless, treeless, damp sinkhole with urban pretensions”. There are plenty of trees, parks and all the urban amenities one could wish for even if the climate in summer is a little hard to handle. The stereotypes of the “bubba” businessmen were also a little hard to stomach. This section of the book almost made me quit reading but I am glad I didn’t.

But this isn’t a story about Houston; this is set in former coal country in Pennsylvania. The latest round of extractive industry begins with a “landman” approaching local residents, most of whom are struggling to get by. For an upfront payment, these residents sell their mineral rights for a payment per acre with promises of income down the road once drilling begins.

So begins what is really a second or third wave of exploitation of resources in the area of Bakerton, PA. As the author puts it: “Rural Pennsylvania doesn’t fascinate the world, not generally, but cyclically, periodically, its innards are of interest”.

Ms, Haigh explores the remnants of coal mining, family history and its impact on decisions made today, The forces for and against fracking who are either off to the next cause or on to the next unexplored terrain are contrasted beautifully with the people who live in Bakerton and must live with their decisions for long after the business people and activists are gone.

The lives of the locals are explored in a very real way and without preaching about it; the ills of a town left behind by the 21st economy are explored through a number of characters you can’t help caring about. This is true even if you become frustrated with their choices. In other words they are human and as most of our friends and family are in real life.

There are no tidy endings here, again as in our real lives and where the people we have grown to care about is unknown. The story will stay with you though and inform the brief news stories and commentary we see about industry and environmental concerns. After all, there are people living in these areas and the news stories have very real world consequences for their present and their future lives.