“The Big Burn,” Timothy Egan (2009). Egan, who wrote this year’s sensational “A Fever in the Heartland,” describes a 1910 forest fire in Washington, Montana and Idaho. Unlike others on this list, the engrossing, minute-by-minute account is not the heart of Egan’s book. Instead, it’s about how politicians, including Teddy Roosevelt, used one of the worst wildfires in U.S. history to champion the creation of a national forest service.
“Under a Flaming Sky,” Daniel James Brown (2006). This page-turner, subtitled “The Great Hinckley Firestorm of 1894,” puts us right on the scene as an enormous blaze consumes much of central Minnesota. Using survivor accounts, Brown (who later wrote bestselling “The Boys in the Boat”) put together a moment-by-moment recap of the tragedy, its more than 400 victims and its heroes, including a train porter who calmly supervised one of the only means of escape.
“Triangle: The Fire That Changed America,” David Von Drehle (2004). The usual villains appear in this riveting, achingly sad book: corporate indifference, inadequate safety, greed. There’s also sexism, since the victims of the 1911 Greenwich Village fire were female employees at a blouse factory (the building still stands). Von Drehle’s details are astonishing — Who missed the last elevator down? Who fled to the roof? — but he doesn’t lose track of the larger story. When the world learned about Triangle’s shoddy safety measures, protests led to the creation of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
“Ship Ablaze: The Tragedy of the Steamboat General Slocum,” Edward T. O’Donnell (2003). Most have never heard of the burning of the General Slocum but until the Sept. 11 attacks it was New York’s worst tragedy. More than 1,000 people died in a fire that — apparently started by a cigarette — occurred in the East River, within a football throw of the Manhattan shoreline. O’Donnell traces what led passengers to the ship — most were headed to a church picnic — and the shocking safety lapses (poorly made life preservers, inadequate lifeboats, untrained crew) that increased the fire’s appalling toll.