How to Set Yourself on Fire

Julia Dixon Evans
3.71
318 ratings 69 reviews
"It’s not romantic," Torrey says. "It’s physics. For every letter there is an equal and opposite, you know…letter." Sheila’s life is built of little thievings. Adrift in her mid-thirties, she sleeps in fragments, ditches her temp jobs, eavesdrops on her neighbor’s Skype calls, and keeps a stolen letter in her nightstand, penned by a UPS driver she barely knows. Her mother is stifling and her father is a bad memory. Her only friends are her mysterious, slovenly neighbor Vinnie and his daughter Torrey, a quirky twelve-year-old coping with a recent tragedy. When her grandmother Rosamond dies, Sheila inherits a box of secret love letters from Harold C. Carr―a man who is not her grandfather. In spite of herself, Sheila gets caught up in the legacy of the affair, piecing together her grandmother’s past and forging bonds with Torrey and Vinnie as intense and fragile as the crumbling pages in Rosamond’s shoebox. As they get closer to unraveling the truth, Sheila grows almost as obsessed with the letters as the man who wrote them. Somewhere, there’s an answering stack of letters―written in Rosamond’s hand―and Sheila can’t stop until she uncovers the rest of the story. Threaded with wry humor and the ache of love lost or left behind, How to Set Yourself on Fire establishes Julia Dixon Evans as a rising talent in the vein of Shirley Jackson and Lindsay Hunter.
Genres: FictionRealistic FictionContemporaryLiterary Fiction
312 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
76 (24%)
4 star
121 (38%)
3 star
83 (26%)
2 star
29 (9%)
1 star
9 (3%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Julia Dixon Evans

Lists with this book

Daisy Jones & The Six
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo
Malibu Rising
Books Set in Southern California
384 books • 55 voters
Never Always Sometimes
Every Last Word
The Boy Who Couldn't Sleep and Never Had To
Paper Strips
43 books • 8 voters