Cover Image: Thumb Fire Desire

Thumb Fire Desire

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Member Reviews

A love story of Peter and Ginny. The small Polish town in Michigan where they lived and the great Thumb Fire and it's devastation. I live in Wisconsin and was unaware of such a fire. I enjoyed the romance and also the historical fiction aspect of this story.

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Thumb Fire Desires set in the "thumb" of Michigan during the late 1800's. Ginny Dahlke comes to live with her brother and sister-in-law in a Polish American community. I was not very familiar with the area or culture and liked how the author included lots of details about Polish culture. While the characters are fictional, it is based on a real event, a fire that devastated the area. The perseverance and faith of these people shown through in Nickles' writing. While I knew nothing of the Thumb fire, I was pleasantly surprised that there were many references to the town of Dansville, NY which is a small town in the same county where I grew up. It was a cool connection for me.


I liked Ginny a lot. She was caring and hard-working, but also had a sense of humor. Peter, her love interest, was also a good person liked to play jokes. Peter has suffered the loss of a wife and infant daughter and is naturally hesitant to start another relationship. I enjoy a romance where the relationship really develops and the characters get to know each other. You definitely get that in this story, but I would have preferred that it go a little faster. Peter's indecisiveness grew tiresome at times. Overall though, it was a sweet, slow-burn romance.

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Well written and researched novel about the Great Thumb Fire of September 5, 1881. It's also a love story between Polish immigrants Ginny Dahlke and widower Peter Nickles. Good book.

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This started out a really interesting story! I live in Michigan's Thumb, but didn't know a whole lot about the Great Fire. I didn't realize how involved Clara Barton and the Red Cross were in helping fire victims.

The storyline keeps rolling along enough to keep you interested - the characters are well developed and relatable - you really root for them and hope for a good harvest. Ginny moves from New York to live with her brother, Joseph, and his wife, Kathleen in Michigan. Her benefactor has sent her a sewing machine and she gets immersed in her new community with sewing for the townsfolks and getting to know the families, including widower Peter. There is a big build up to the great fire, but the event itself isn't as detailed as I thought it would be. I thought there would be more of a storyline after the fire, the losses and triumphs, but that seemed glossed over fast, including a couple random love scenes that didn't seem to fit in with the rest of the story.

Thank you to NetGalley, the author and publisher for a temporary, digital ARC in return for my review.

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