And no, you’re not safe

For a book revolving around a city-consuming wildfire in Canada, John Vaillant’s Fire Weather — named this month a U.S. National Book Award non-fiction finalist — features a great deal of California content. This state’s fiery cataclysms, Vaillant says, opened a window into everybody’s future.

California’s eight largest fires in recorded history came in the past seven years, an abrupt escalation that “anticipated what a lot of us are experiencing now,” Vaillant said in an interview. “A lot of North Americans comforted ourselves: ‘Well, that’s just a California thing. This couldn’t happen to us.’ We are learning that no, it can happen anywhere.”

Vaillant, a U.S.-born journalist and author, visited Redding in Northern California shortly after the Carr Fire in 2018, the state’s eighth-most damaging blaze that killed eight people and torched 1,600 structures. It also spawned the world’s second observed fire tornado, an apocalyptic phenomenon unknown before fossil fuel use heated Earth into what Vaillant in his book calls “a fire planet that we have made.”

The way the tornado moved “was so astonishing, and obliterating,” Vaillant says. “It really was comparable to Hiroshima or Nagasaki. It was destruction on a scale that I’ve never seen anywhere.”

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