Waterproofing with paraffin and gasoline - what could go wrong? When Stewart O'Nan moved to the Hartford area, he heard about a devastating fire that had taken place in July 1944. It had killed 167 people; most of them women and children. He went to the library to get a book on the disaster, only to find that none had been written yet. He started collecting materials, with the object in mind of passing them along to a non-fiction writer, given that he had always written fiction and had no intention of changing fortes, but as the years passed and the piles of research grew, O'Nan determined that if anyone was going to write it, it was going to have to be him. More blessed are we that this was so, because the book that emerged is a brilliant one.
In the tradition of Walter Lord's "A Night to Remember," O'Nan takes us minute-by-minute through the hours leading up to the fire, and the individual experiences of survivors as they struggled to get out of the burning Big Top, with paraffin falling on them in fiery napalm-like droplets. Then there is the painful search for the missing children, many of them separated from parents as people much larger and stronger plowed through the crowd to save themselves, without a thought to anyone they might be trampling underfoot. Finally, O'Nan investigates the assessment of blame (and there's plenty to go around), and the meting out of penalties to those in charge.
Throughout the book are stories of individual heroism, sacrifice and plain good luck. One man tossed dozens of children to safety before he was trampled. One little boy used his pocket knife to cut holes in the canvas, allowing hundreds to escape. One little girl jumped from the back of the bleachers, and her life as a tomboy (giving her the knowledge of how to land) saved her from the broken ankles and broken backs that so many others suffered; those people hit the ground and then couldn't outrun the fire. Emmett Kelly, the famous clown, hauled water and directed patrons to safety, as did many of the other performers. Countless anonymous audience members made sure that little ones got out safely. Some even took them home, treated their burns and fed them until their parents could be found. Yes, there were greedy jerks who charged $5.00 per call for the use of their telephones (and got it), but most gave generously from their limited, rationed supplies. Front gardens became first-aid stations and company vehicles became ambulances.
One of the many ironies of this story is that if the fire had happened prior to 1941, the outcome might have been far more dire. Because of wartime mobilization and the fact that Hartford was an industrial center with munitions targets, there were plans in place for mass casualties and these worked with high efficiency on July 6, 1944. There had been triage test-runs, and plans in place for identification of the dead, along with stockpiles of medical supplies meant for just such injuries as the Circus Fire caused.
For fans of literary non-fiction, in the style of Walter Lord, Laura Hillenbrand and Erik Larson, this is certainly a title to add to the canon. I would have loved to have seen an index included - late in the book a person is given a medal for his heroics, but it had been so long since I'd read about them I'd forgotten what he'd done. An index would have been helpful, and if Mr. O'Nan were more experienced in writing non-fiction, I'm confident he would have included one. It is a five-star read even so, and I can tell you that after reading it, I'll never again attend a public event without knowing where the nearest exit is. Apparently, every survivor does the same, and not because of anything they read, but because of the nightmares they continue to have to this day.