Brian Fies is a writer and cartoonist of the award-winning graphic novels Mom’s Cancer and Whatever Happened to the World of Tomorrow? Although Fies lost his home, he and his wife have rebuilt and are living once again in their old neighborhood in Santa Rosa, California.
Subtle and heart-wrenching. --Press Democrat An effective snapshot of a broad disaster. --io9 As striking as it is detailed. --Entertainment Weekly A Fire Story grabs you from the first page, drawing you in with its harrowing and uplifting tale of loss, survival, and the power of community. Fies is a master storyteller who uses his skills as a cartoonist to create deeply personal stories with lasting impact. --Jeff Kinney, Diary of a Wimpy Kid A Fire Story is that most potent of accounts, both immediate yet timeless. Brian Fies's deceptively simple words and pictures drew me in from page one, then delivered a triple punch to the gut: clutching dread, followed by hollow despair, and ultimately quiet, unquenchable determination. You don't merely read this, you feel it. --Richard Pini, ElfQuest The unimaginable has been laid out on the page by author and artist Brian Fies. Brian's own story provides the framework, but he also incorporates the vivid recollection of others to paint a picture of a horrendous night and its aftermath. A Fire Story is more than just a graphic novel, it is journalism and memoir at its best. --Jean Schulz, President, the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center in Santa Rosa, California Brian Fies sat down with some Sharpies and some paper to process his pain the way he knows best. He began to draw. The result is A Fire Story . . . a webcomic that recounts the heart-wrenching devastation the California wildfires has wrought. Fies is a graphic novelist, one of the best in his field. A few years ago, when his mom was battling terminal cancer, he processed his grief by writing the comic Mom's Cancer. It won an Eisner Award, one of the comic world's highest achievements. Now he's had to do it all over again. --CNN