When asked for Play Book Tag, what is your favorite "category", I think the one that always emerges as the clear winner is "Thought Provoking." Which can mean a lot of things, and a lot of things to a lot of people. This book is one that is not simply an entertaining read. It makes you think. And consider yourself, and the moral, ethical, legal decisions you might or would make in an absolutely impossible situation.
I like it when books are not formulaic and they try something a little different. This one is no exception. Set in 1811, the book traces four people who were or may have been involved in a devastating fire in a theater located in Richmond Virginia. Told from four different points of view, we have a young widow socialite, an abused slave who sees a chance for freedom, another slave who understands he will never be free, and a young orphaned teenager, who wants to be a part of theater, and who is a huge part of how the fire began. The quintessential line, "The House is On Fire" actually belongs to him.
As the book traces the devastating events, the consequences that follow, and the choices that are made, each one of the individuals has to decide some incredibly complex moral questions. Or perhaps they are not complex at all, and its really about instinct and character, despite the impossible times in which one lives. Separate from the morality of slavery, and owning a person, which is heinous to contemplate to begin with, there are the questions of "Do you save yourself, or save others?" Do you step in to help, or do you sit back? Do you take responsibility, or allow others to take the fall for you? Do you make a problem worse or try to confront the rising tide of hatred? To whom are you indebted? How does one act in grief? What choices are made when everything is on the line? Who do you save? Do you have a moral compass, and how do you act and behave when that moral compass is pressed.
Everything to me these days is a reflection of the moral and humane challenge we currently face in the United States. I simply cannot separate it. The question of how we behave when the House is One Fire has everything to do with who we are as people. Do we stand up today to moral injustice? Do we allow nameless faceless others to take the blame for our own selfish greed? Do we trample others to make it out alive, or do we lend a helping hand? Are we the ones who put ourselves in danger to save others? Do we take responsibility? Do we speak truth to power? The book is unsettling on that front, as are the times we live in today. I have thought a lot about how to live during these times, and the answer I keep coming up with is this. We must be the people we wish others and our country to be. We must live our values and character by behaving in the way we believe to be correct, even if that places us in danger. Sometimes sacrificing ourselves for another, or coming close, is what is needed to put that change into consciousness. And that as people, especially as minority groups, we are connected. And we must live that way.
We must also find joy and connection amidst darker times. We simply cannot live in a space without music, and theater, and laughter, and art, and beauty. We must live with hope and resiliency and love, no matter our circumstances. We must always be the light. A very small amount of light always defeats the darkness, and each of us can be a pinprick. Together, we can be a beacon.