As wildfire rips through the small town of Stone Lake, the past is never finished with the living.
Faces in the Flames gathers thirteen linked stories about people shaped by labor, inheritance, and the long aftermath of violence in the smoke-darkened lake country of Northern California.
A builder's two sons circle each other through decades of love and resentment. A Black mechanic carries grief from a Greek mountainside back to the town that raised him. A Vietnam veteran holds himself together with military precision and unravels when the routine breaks. A Vietnamese girl burns her drawings behind her family's restaurant, dreaming of a life no one around her can see. A pastor finds his truest calling in a motel room on the wrong side of town. A hoarder watches a wildfire take everything he owns and cannot bring himself to stop it.
These characters move through bars, job sites, churches, and quiet water at night —crossing paths in the way people do in small towns, where everyone's story is tangled up in everyone else's. A mechanic becomes a father figure to the boy who will one day be arrested by the officer who was passed over for that same job. A street preacher and a woman who has survived every kind of damage find each other in the least likely of places. The debts and legacies of one generation land, unasked for, on the next.
N.T. McQueen writes with unsparing intimacy about shame, devotion, and the difficult work of staying human under pressure. These are not stories about people who triumph. They are stories about people who endure—and occasionally, at great cost, break free.