Little Fires Everywhere Jun 2026
, the bestselling 2017 novel by Celeste Ng, is a masterful exploration of suburban conformity, the complexities of motherhood, and the hidden fractures of privilege. Set in the meticulously planned community of
Ng handles this moral quagmire with delicate precision. There are no easy answers. She asks the reader to question the definition of motherhood. Is it biology? Is it the act of raising a child? Is it the ability to provide? By juxtaposing the McCulloughs' wealth with Bebe’s desperation, and Mia’s own secret history of surrogate motherhood, the novel complicates the narrative, refusing to let the reader settle into a comfortable judgment. Little Fires Everywhere
"Sometimes you need to scorch everything to the ground, and start over. After the burning the soil is richer, and new things can grow. People are like that, too." , the bestselling 2017 novel by Celeste Ng,
The novel serves as a "deep psychological mystery" centered on different definitions of a "good" mother. Heartspoken She asks the reader to question the definition of motherhood
While the family dynamics provide the emotional core, the plot’s driving force is a custody battle that splits the community down the middle. The case involves Mirabelle McCullough (born May Ling Chow), a baby abandoned at a fire station and adopted by the wealthy, white McCullough family. Years later, the biological mother, Bebe Chow—a Chinese immigrant and friend of Mia’s—resurfaces, fighting to get her daughter back.


