---
product_id: 60677729
title: "Little Fires Everywhere: 'Outstanding' Matt Haig"
price: "32 zł"
currency: PLN
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.pl/products/60677729-little-fires-everywhere-outstanding-matt-haig
store_origin: PL
region: Poland
---

# Little Fires Everywhere: 'Outstanding' Matt Haig

**Price:** 32 zł
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- **What is this?** Little Fires Everywhere: 'Outstanding' Matt Haig
- **How much does it cost?** 32 zł with free shipping
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## Description

Buy Little Fires Everywhere: 'Outstanding' Matt Haig 1 by Ng, Celeste (ISBN: 9780349142920) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders.

Review: Waffling review - My kind of book. Refreshing to follow teenage characters through the same era I was that age with the music, fashion, telly, technology and other cultural references. This coming of age novel doesn't feel overly YA-ish though with a strong theme of motherhood throughout. I can see how it would work well as a television drama with so many characters, plots and subplots. It's also a very visual book with one character as a photographic artist and descriptions of the Shaker Heights community. At times subtle but never sneaky, Ng lays out opposing views on emotive issues through her characters. There were moments that made me glad to live in the UK in 2018 when reference was made to Elena's employers being good for giving her 6 weeks maternity leave after each child. SIX WEEKS!? Be fair. The plot involving a baby born to a Chinese single mother fighting for custody of her baby from a wealthy white couple broke my heart. My cousin has been through the adoption process and it was so much more thorough and if there had been even a whiff of the birth family wanting to keep the child the adoption wouldn't have gone through. The idea that wealth trumps actually giving birth to a child with zero support from the state is appalling no matter how desperate the couple are or how good they'd be as parents. And don't get me started on race. It's an issue that's threaded throughout but never fully resolved. Which I'm fine with. There's a good courtroom bit that addresses the assumptions of some characters. Elena and her mate with Mirabelle could do with reading Picoult's Small Great Things. They need to check their privilege. The ending was fairly loose and open and I wonder if a sequel could or would work. Set in 2018, the teenage characters would now be in their mid 30s, some would have their own children, how have relationships developed, have the people who didn't want yo be found get found, does SPOILER ALERT May return to the US, what happened to Bebe, did the house get rebuilt, etc. It's about sacrifice, love, teenage relationships (took me back to sneaking around with my boyfriend), families, community, motherhood, power, the impact of newcomers, surrogacy, adoption, race. I've scored it high because I enjoyed it. It might not be the best book in the world ever but star rating' s are a flawed system.
Review: Well-written, pacy tale of middle-America - 3.5 Stars rounded up. My sister recommended this as something a bit different to help me out my reading slump. I see it's been made into a Netflix series too, and I can understand why, it is a very cinematic book with a fast-paced story and some intriguing characters. So, we have a nice, middle-class Edward Scissorhands-type American town, and into it come Mia and her daughter Pearl, ready to stir things up. We have the Richardson's three teenage children who are, without knowing it, ripe for being stirred up, and we have Elena Richardson, a woman who plays by the rules, but who kind of sort of would have liked to have been a rebel, if you could be a rebel by playing by the rules. And so the fire is lit under all of them. The story unravels at quite a pace, and jumps backwards and forwards in time, with the perspective/point of view jumping about at about the same rate. I found this a little disconcerting at first, but quickly got used to it. This is a genuine page turner of a story with some very real social issues at the heart of it, not least racism and prejudice. It's the sort of story I can imagine stirred up some 'middle' Americans (I loved the whole thing about the baby dolls). It's really well-written, the characters are three-dimensional, and of course we all relate to Mia and hate Elena - well sort of. I raced through it, and only when I got to the end did I start to fret at some of the plot holes and the issues with the motivation of some of the characters - what on earth was Mr Richardson doing for most of the book, for example. This is a woman's story, so the male characters are a little less well-drawn and a little more plot-creations, but I don't have an issue with that. Thoroughly enjoyable and just the sort of read I needed at the moment. I don't think it would stand up to a second reading, but instead I am launching into the author's earlier book.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN  | 0349142920 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 243,437 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 360 in Adoption (Books) 558 in Women's Literary Fiction (Books) 1,174 in Literary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (181,849) |
| Dimensions  | 13.1 x 2.5 x 20 cm |
| Edition  | 1st |
| ISBN-10  | 9780349142920 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-0349142920 |
| Item weight  | 328 g |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 400 pages |
| Publication date  | 5 April 2018 |
| Publisher  | Abacus |

## Images

![Little Fires Everywhere: 'Outstanding' Matt Haig - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81rcVnz-jQL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Waffling review
*by K***R on 26 April 2018*

My kind of book. Refreshing to follow teenage characters through the same era I was that age with the music, fashion, telly, technology and other cultural references. This coming of age novel doesn't feel overly YA-ish though with a strong theme of motherhood throughout. I can see how it would work well as a television drama with so many characters, plots and subplots. It's also a very visual book with one character as a photographic artist and descriptions of the Shaker Heights community. At times subtle but never sneaky, Ng lays out opposing views on emotive issues through her characters. There were moments that made me glad to live in the UK in 2018 when reference was made to Elena's employers being good for giving her 6 weeks maternity leave after each child. SIX WEEKS!? Be fair. The plot involving a baby born to a Chinese single mother fighting for custody of her baby from a wealthy white couple broke my heart. My cousin has been through the adoption process and it was so much more thorough and if there had been even a whiff of the birth family wanting to keep the child the adoption wouldn't have gone through. The idea that wealth trumps actually giving birth to a child with zero support from the state is appalling no matter how desperate the couple are or how good they'd be as parents. And don't get me started on race. It's an issue that's threaded throughout but never fully resolved. Which I'm fine with. There's a good courtroom bit that addresses the assumptions of some characters. Elena and her mate with Mirabelle could do with reading Picoult's Small Great Things. They need to check their privilege. The ending was fairly loose and open and I wonder if a sequel could or would work. Set in 2018, the teenage characters would now be in their mid 30s, some would have their own children, how have relationships developed, have the people who didn't want yo be found get found, does SPOILER ALERT May return to the US, what happened to Bebe, did the house get rebuilt, etc. It's about sacrifice, love, teenage relationships (took me back to sneaking around with my boyfriend), families, community, motherhood, power, the impact of newcomers, surrogacy, adoption, race. I've scored it high because I enjoyed it. It might not be the best book in the world ever but star rating' s are a flawed system.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Well-written, pacy tale of middle-America
*by M***E on 29 May 2020*

3.5 Stars rounded up. My sister recommended this as something a bit different to help me out my reading slump. I see it's been made into a Netflix series too, and I can understand why, it is a very cinematic book with a fast-paced story and some intriguing characters. So, we have a nice, middle-class Edward Scissorhands-type American town, and into it come Mia and her daughter Pearl, ready to stir things up. We have the Richardson's three teenage children who are, without knowing it, ripe for being stirred up, and we have Elena Richardson, a woman who plays by the rules, but who kind of sort of would have liked to have been a rebel, if you could be a rebel by playing by the rules. And so the fire is lit under all of them. The story unravels at quite a pace, and jumps backwards and forwards in time, with the perspective/point of view jumping about at about the same rate. I found this a little disconcerting at first, but quickly got used to it. This is a genuine page turner of a story with some very real social issues at the heart of it, not least racism and prejudice. It's the sort of story I can imagine stirred up some 'middle' Americans (I loved the whole thing about the baby dolls). It's really well-written, the characters are three-dimensional, and of course we all relate to Mia and hate Elena - well sort of. I raced through it, and only when I got to the end did I start to fret at some of the plot holes and the issues with the motivation of some of the characters - what on earth was Mr Richardson doing for most of the book, for example. This is a woman's story, so the male characters are a little less well-drawn and a little more plot-creations, but I don't have an issue with that. Thoroughly enjoyable and just the sort of read I needed at the moment. I don't think it would stand up to a second reading, but instead I am launching into the author's earlier book.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Amazing Story! Highly recommend
*by U***S on 29 March 2018*

The book opens with a fire that burnt down the house of Richardson’s, one of the residents of Shaker Heights district. Izzy, the rebel child of the household is nowhere to be found and they guess that she set the house on fire. She lighted up ‘little fires everywhere’ to make sure the house burns down. But, we don’t know if this is true, or why. And the story goes back for us to come back to find out if and why she did it. The novel starts with an intriguing event, that makes you immediately curious about who this ‘Izzy’ is, why on earth she set the house on fire, what hapenned!!! I really like books when the story grips you from the first page, and Celeste Ng did this perfectly. I was hooked from the beginning to end. Second thing that’s really good about the book is the characters. I loved Mia and Izzy. Even now I want to know more, read more, talk more about them. They are interesting and gripping. The way Ng built and revealed the history, their memories, the events affected their characters was very well done. The story evolved into something really emotional and thought-provoking, which I didn’t expect as well. It makes you think about many things at the same time. Dynamics of society, ethics of motherhood, and more. I would highly recommend this book. It’s very rich, enjoyable and gripping.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Little Fires Everywhere
- Everything I Never Told You

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*Product available on Desertcart Poland*
*Store origin: PL*
*Last updated: 2026-04-26*