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An ambitious firefighter hunts a notorious arsonist in the Edgar Award-winning true crime story the New York Times calls "stranger than fiction." From Joseph Wambaugh, the #1 New York Times-bestselling author of such classics as The Onion Field and The Choirboys, comes the extraordinary story of the chase for the "Pillow Pyro," called the most prolific American arsonist of the twentieth century. Growing up in Los Angeles, John Orr idolized law enforcement. However, after being rejected by show more both the LAPD and LAFD, he settled for a position with the Glendale Fire Department. There, he rose through the ranks, eventually becoming a fire captain and one of Southern California's best-known and most respected arson investigators. But Orr led another, unseen life, one that included womanizing and an insatiable thirst for recognition. While Orr busted a slew of petty arsonists, there was one serial criminal he could not track down. Nothing was safe from the so-called Pillow Pyro's obsession. Homes, retail stores, and fields of dry brush all went up in flames. His handiwork led to millions of dollars worth of property damage and the deaths of four innocent bystanders. But after years of evading the police, he made a mistake-one that would turn Orr's life upside down. The Washington Post raves, "When [Joseph Wambaugh] talks about the culture of cops versus the culture of firemen, we get no speculation, only hard-earned details." Based on meticulous research, interviews, case records, and thousands of pages of court transcripts, Fire Lover is Wambaugh at his best. show less

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9 reviews
Fire Lover is the crazy true story of John Leonard Orr, a psychopathic pyromaniac that probably set hundreds of fires in California in the 1980s and 1990s. Being one of the only serial arsonists ever to have been caught and convicted of his crimes (which included the deaths of four people), he is famously known for being a firefighter who rose to the rank of fire inspector. Having lived in Southern California all my life, I remember some of the fires sighted in the book. It's horrible to know this guy was loose, running around causing so much destruction for so long. Only after years of thorough evidence gathering by the ATF, LAPD, and Fire Arson Inspectors were they able to lock him away for life. I thought Mr. Wambaugh did an show more excellent job laying out the facts in this detailed true-crime thriller. show less
Review: Fire Lover by Joseph Wambaugh.

This was a compelling true crime story about a firefighter who was also a serial arsonist. It was well written but a little tedious through the court proceedings. Wambaugh did his research and provided so many details concerning to the story that took place in Glendale and Los Angeles, California area. It has been said that it is one of the most notorious arson cases in Los Angeles’ history.

Some of the details are gripping and so is the detection of John Orr by investigators; proving patterns, lining up witnesses, connecting one critical fingerprint, secretly setting up John Orr, gathering information on his lifestyle and four marriages while at the same time profiling a very disturbed man. show more Despite the excessive and unmistakably non-journalistic flair, the core of the story is a fascinating portrait of a dark side of John Orr who recklessly torched property, homes and businesses with extremely casual disregard for human life. He never said he was sorry and always stated he was innocent.

There was another side of John Orr that people liked and he was a mentor for a few firefighters just starting out. The day John Orr was picked up and charged with arson it was a shock to all that new him. He was a top arson investigator who also gave lectures to new recruits and explained to these men some of the details arsonist use to start fires and he never gave any sign for years that he was an arsonist. He worked for the Glendale Fire Department and he got along with everyone there. It took some time before some people would even consider him guilty of arson.

However, John Orr had a darker side to him and when he was turned down for the police Department it really upset him enough that he wanted revenge. From a very young age he wanted to be a policeman and failing to become one embedded deep anger within himself that he could not release. When he started working as a firefighter and climbed the ranks to an arson investigator he was feeling some release but not enough to where he even treated his wives and girlfriends with strange behaviors and rough sex.

The story was informative, interesting, disturbing, and John Orr got what he deserved when four people, one a two-year-old child, died in one of his obsessed fire settings….
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½
Wambaugh took a break from his norm, and wrote this non-fiction book about a Southern California arson investigator who also happens to be a major fire setter. The story is well documented and presented in a way to keep you interested. When it comes to the courtroom trials, you might just feel like part of the jury, assessing the evidence presented to determine if it's sufficient to arrive at a guilty verdict. A good read for anyone with an interest or background in the fire service.
This is not usually the type of book I like to read, but I read the description and the story seemed so outrageous I had to give it a shot. A firefighter who is also a serial arsonist? This is the type of thing I read nonfiction for.

The story is presented in thorough detail, which, while providing interesting details, also makes the experience a bit repetitive. I would describe the story in three parts: First, story that describes John Orr's life leading up to his being arrested and charged with arson; second, the trial, where the story is recounted again; third, the sentencing, where the story is recounted for the third time. Procedure in court and law help break up monotony, though for anyone not interested in all the technicalities I show more would not recommend this book. Or, rather, I might recommend the first two parts, but by the sentencing trial there's little left to learn about the actual strange events and mind behind them.

Wambaugh describes lawyers as "strange fish in the litigation tank," which sums up the customs of court that might seem a bit backwards to the rest of us. Lawyers nit-picking everything until situations become laughable is a bit fun, but if you're not into crime and court books and don't want to give one I try I wouldn't recommend it. However, while this is the only crime book like this I've read, I imagine it's a decent introduction to this genre.
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John Orr wanted to be a police officer, applied several times but was never accepted. Instead, he became a firefighter and eventually the Chief Arson Investigator of his department. He was well respected and conducted seminars for other firefighters on arson investigation. During this time, he was setting many fires and not getting caught until he left a fingerprint that eventually led to his arrest, to the astonishment of fellow firefighters.

There was great detail throughout the book on the fires and, in particular, the ones that he was charged with. The most interesting part to me was when the police knew it was him and they were trying to catch him in the act before arresting him. He was hard to catch. The least interesting was the show more part about the two trials, which were long and became tedious. Overall, just a so-so read for me. show less
½
Fire Lover is about the case of John Leonard Orr. Orr was one of the most respected arson investigators in the state of California...and one of the most prolific serial arsonists the United States has ever seen.

The first half of the book is very exciting...and even compels you to try solve the case before the author lets you in on all the details.

The second half of the book was painfully slow & repetitive. I really only finished the book because I hate to leave a book unfinished. The terribly boring second half of Fire Lover almost ruined the experience of reading what is a very interesting story.
The first half of the book was quite intriguing, the detailing of 'the how', 'the what' and 'the why' of how John Orr became one of the most prolific Arsonists in history. However, the 2nd half is a mind numbingly boring blow by blow account of Orr's travails thru the legal system - an account which probably should have consisted of about one total chapter, rather than half the book.
½

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In 1990, during the worst fire in Glendale's history, some noted that Orr's behavior "seemed very peculiar." That same year, Orr was appointed fire captain and began writing a "fact-based novel" about a serial arsonist who turns out to be a firefighter—and in it Orr revealed certain facts about the unsolved arson case that he couldn't have known through his work. Was Orr the serial arsonist? show more Wambaugh recreates these events for a suspenseful, adrenaline-rush account of what one profiler dubbed "probably the most prolific American arsonist" of the 20th century. show less
Apr 22, 2002
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True Crime Books
62 works; 15 members
Books Read in 2006
417 works; 8 members
Edgar Award
418 works; 15 members
Five star books
1,755 works; 108 members
Bookshelf from Interstellar
62 works; 1 member
Fires
9 works; 1 member

Author Information

Picture of author.
28+ Works 10,810 Members
Writer Joseph Wambaugh was born in East Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on January 22, 1937. He joined the Marines right out of high school, but later earned both a B. A. and M. A. from California State College in Los Angeles. He worked for the Los Angeles Police Department from 1960 to 1974. His first novel was The New Centurions (1971) and several show more subsequent novels have been award winners. The Onion Field won an Edgar Award (1984), and Lines and Shadows won the Rodolfo Walsh Prize from the International Association of Crime Writers (1989). He has worked creatively on several film and television projects, including Police Story, The Black Marble, The Choirboys and The Blue Knight. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Fire Lover
Dedication
For Mike Matassa
First words
It wasn't until January of 2002 that an episode in Los Angeles finally closed the book on a unique criminal investigation and prosecution. - Prologue
South Pasadena is a small city of some twenty thousand residents who live within three square miles of mostly aging homes and limited commercial property. - Chapter One
Quotations
...prime examples of the Gdansk school of design visited upon Los Angeles from the 1950s through two decades, a blight of concrete boxes the color of bacon grease, that had to pay homage to “art” by planting an ugly mosai... (show all)c or sculpture vaguely resembling human beings smack dab in front, in order to assure all who entered that this bureaucracy cared about humanity.
And everyone got out of there and careened into the nightmare of Friday afternoon traffic in Los Angeles, where frustrated people routinely stare at one another through tinted glass and contemplate acts of violence.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And there was absolutely no more to be done by the People of the State of California in the strange case of John Leonard Orr. -Chapter 23
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)John Orr himself had often set it forth in his writings, sometimes sardonically, but perhaps a touch witfully: everybody loves a fireman. -Epilogue
Canonical DDC/MDS
364.164
Canonical LCC
HV6638.5.U6

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
364.164Social sciencesSocial problems and social servicesCriminologyCriminal offensesCrimes of propertyViolent offenses against property
LCC
HV6638.5 .U6Social sciencesSocial pathology. Social and public welfare. CriminologySocial pathology. Social and public welfare.CriminologyCrimes and offenses
BISAC

Statistics

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409
Popularity
75,437
Reviews
9
Rating
(3.79)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
14
UPCs
1
ASINs
6