Fighting Fire by Caroline Paul: Book Cover

    Fighting Fire by Caroline Paul

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    (Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

    • Pub. Date: June 1999
    • 272pp
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: June 1999
      • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
      • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 272pp

      Synopsis

      She fought the prejudice. She fought the stereotype. Then she fought the greatest force of all-- fire.

      When the San Francisco Fire Department broke their all-male rule to hire women, Caroline Paul never thought she'd be chosen. She had already enrolled in film school. And Caroline, a strikingly beautiful Stanford graduate, didn't fit anyone's idea of a fireman. Except her own.

      Even though she loved testing her limits on white water rivers or Alpine mountains, plunging into a flame-engulfed building would be different than anything she had ever done. Now, in hard-edged prose as crackling as a four-alarm fire, she tells her amazing story. From her fight to match her colleagues physically and mentally, to her silent determination to face her fears, she tells of infernos, heroism, and heartbreaking tragedy. And with a will forged by fire, she reveals one woman's realization of a dream burning in her soul.

      Kirkus Reviews

      This memoir of one of the first women to penetrate the all-male bastion of the San Francisco Fire Department offers the story of one womanþs education in political consciousness and personal discovery. It also provides valuable insights into the life and day-to-day dangers facing a metropolitan firefighter. Stanford University graduate and aspiring filmmaker Paul cannot account for her desire to become a firefighter. Her motivations are deeply seated in some primordial fascination with one of natureþs most mysterious elements as well as with a strong desire to prove that she could do something virtually everyone believed she couldnþt. Emerging from a genteel, upper-middle-class family, steeped in the '80s lifestyle of healthy habits, committed to trendy social causes, and gorgeous (her identical twin lands a part as a Baywatch þBabeþ), Paul is an unlikely candidate for one of the most physically and mentally demanding professions in the world. Nevertheless, she works her way through the training and probationary period, past male chauvinist resistance, and finally earns her stripes as a reliable member of an engine crew and then as an heroic part of a rescue squad. Along the way, she earns a graduate degree in film, has at least one or two serious relationships, and still finds time to campaign against the illegal imprisonment of her brother, who has been incarcerated for his militant animal rights activities. The narrative is repetitive and sometimes slowed by sophomoric sociological and psychological observations and a plethora of inexcusable grammatical errors. It is also marred by a herky-jerky sentence style that extends to an episodic, anecdotalstructure. But the memoir eventually rises above such flaws to offer an outstanding account of one womanþs struggle to prove her personal worth and courage and to make her place in a world previously reserved exclusively for men. (First serial to Reader's Digest; Book-of-the-Month Club/Quality Paperback Book Club featured alternate selection; author tour)

      Customer Reviews

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      • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

      Fighting Fireby Anonymous

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      January 11, 2004: In Jan 2004 this book is very timely, as a fellow female fire-fighter was just nominated to be the next San Francisco Fire Chief.

      Fighting Fireby Anonymous

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      April 20, 2000: I think that this book tells the women side of the story, how tough it is to be able to be treated equaly in the world. I also believe that any women who has the guts to do what Caroline Paul did is very brave, and it just proves that women are just as good as men in any field of work. The book was great I loved it!