Burning books = bad. Books about burning = almost inevitably good.
There may not be enough books about fighting fires to qualify as a genre, but there are a lot of good ones. Whether they're in the wilds of Montana or the middle of a great city — like Twin Cities native Scott W. Berg's new "The Burning of the World," about the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 — they're drama-filled tales that show humans at their best and worst. Helpfully for writers, they also tend to leave behind lots of documentation.

Here's what to expect from Berg's new book and six other burning books to look for at your library:

The Burning of the World
Berg covers the same ground as most of these books — What started the fire? How did it progress? What happened afterwards? — on the way to showing how Chicago became one of America's great cities. The 1871 fire torched Chitown when it was just three decades old, and ended up accelerating its rapid growth.
The first third of "Burning" grapples with the disaster that wiped out about a third of Chicago, but also details that the drought-ridden Windy City was so fire-prone that it could more accurately have been dubbed the Woody City.
Berg is great on ironic details. I can't stop thinking about steam-powered fire engines having wood-burning stoves that needed to be stoked even while they were fighting fires, or that Chicago fighters pulled fenceposts out of the ground to fuel engines since the posts were about to burn anyway. I will say, though, that the final two-thirds of the book, which tracks the city's rebound, isn't as impossible to put down.

Young Men and Fire, Norman Maclean (1992). Not just the best account of a fire but one of the finest books ever written about anything, "Young Men" is two-pronged. Half focuses on the brave adventurers who parachuted onto a Montana mountain in 1949 to battle a huge fire. Using his own observations and survivors' memories, Maclean's gripping work helped change how fires are understood. Even better, as Maclean (who wrote "A River Runs Through It"), pieces together the firefighters' actions, "Young Men and Fire" becomes a book about finding meaning in tragedy.