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Fireworks Every Night: A Novel

by Beth Raymer

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412611,983 (3.64)2
Fiction. Literature. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:A young woman trapped in a deeply dysfunctional family in the seedy wilds of 1990s South Florida has to make a choice??save her family, or save herself??in this larger-than-life debut novel from the acclaimed author of Lay the Favorite.
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??With raw humor and even more raw pain, Beth Raymer??s Fireworks Every Night alchemizes the ubiquitous Florida Man headlines into a powerful, humane family portrait.???Xhenet Aliu, author of Brass
??Florida, we got it all. Motor sports, ribs, beer. You can drive on the sand right on up to the ocean. Fireworks every night.?
 
That's how twelve-year-old C.C.??s father, who named her after his beloved Canadian Club whiskey, describes the appeal of their new home. The man is a born grifter, a used-car salesman who burned down his dealership in southern Ohio for enough insurance money to set up a life for himself, his wife, and his two young daughters in a place he picked largely at random, because the living seemed easy.
 
C.C.??s mother is thirty-five going on seventeen, a housewife who just wants to drive a Mustang and hang out at the mall. C.C.??s sister goes from being a sweet, cheerful pre-teen to having a full-on drug addiction and listening only to heavy metal, after enduring forms of abuse within her family. In the midst of this chaos, C.C. is trying to stay afloat and make it out??to achieve some semblance of a stable life in America while coming up against the structural and cultural challenges of growing up in poverty.
 
This tumultuous coming-of-age novel features an unforgettable protagonist, a character who narrates her life story with dark comedy and compassion for her family, even as she is failed by them. Those failures??and her self-taught methods for succeeding anyway??are the backbone of this deeply funny and surprisingly poignant story about hard bargains, family loyalties, and the grit of a woman determined to create a better life f… (more)
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Compelling, readable, and relatable. ( )
  LynnMPK | Apr 21, 2024 |
Fireworks Every Night is narrated by C.C., and we first meet her on the day of her engagement party, hosted by her wealthy future in-laws in Connecticut. She is stunned to find out they have invited her mother, whom she hasn't seen or spoken to in years. And then her mother doesn't show up. It's just the latest in a long series of disappointments and betrayals C.C. has suffered.

Most of the novel is about C.C.'s teenage years in Florida, and her relationship to her highly dysfunctional family. It's a coming of age story about a young woman living on the edge of instability with a volatile father and a weak mother and a troubled sister. There are several chapters about C.C. as an adult, illustrating the effect her upbringing had on her - mistrust, self-reliance, a need to belong somewhere, anywhere.

I really liked C.C. as a character, even as I wished she had more agency and would open her eyes to the reality of her family. Throughout, we see her try to maintain connection, however tenuous, with her father and sister and even her mother. The weakest part of the book were the chapters in which C.C. is an adult - there isn't enough there for the reader to fully understand the choices she makes, and I found the ending somewhat unsatisfying.

That said, this is a strong debut novel, and I will look forward to more from Raymer.

3.75 stars ( )
  katiekrug | Oct 27, 2023 |
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Fiction. Literature. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:A young woman trapped in a deeply dysfunctional family in the seedy wilds of 1990s South Florida has to make a choice??save her family, or save herself??in this larger-than-life debut novel from the acclaimed author of Lay the Favorite.
 
??With raw humor and even more raw pain, Beth Raymer??s Fireworks Every Night alchemizes the ubiquitous Florida Man headlines into a powerful, humane family portrait.???Xhenet Aliu, author of Brass
??Florida, we got it all. Motor sports, ribs, beer. You can drive on the sand right on up to the ocean. Fireworks every night.?
 
That's how twelve-year-old C.C.??s father, who named her after his beloved Canadian Club whiskey, describes the appeal of their new home. The man is a born grifter, a used-car salesman who burned down his dealership in southern Ohio for enough insurance money to set up a life for himself, his wife, and his two young daughters in a place he picked largely at random, because the living seemed easy.
 
C.C.??s mother is thirty-five going on seventeen, a housewife who just wants to drive a Mustang and hang out at the mall. C.C.??s sister goes from being a sweet, cheerful pre-teen to having a full-on drug addiction and listening only to heavy metal, after enduring forms of abuse within her family. In the midst of this chaos, C.C. is trying to stay afloat and make it out??to achieve some semblance of a stable life in America while coming up against the structural and cultural challenges of growing up in poverty.
 
This tumultuous coming-of-age novel features an unforgettable protagonist, a character who narrates her life story with dark comedy and compassion for her family, even as she is failed by them. Those failures??and her self-taught methods for succeeding anyway??are the backbone of this deeply funny and surprisingly poignant story about hard bargains, family loyalties, and the grit of a woman determined to create a better life f

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