City on Fire

City on Fire

2023 • Drama, MysteryTV-MA
A college student is shot in Central Park on July 4, 2003. The investigation connects a series of mysterious citywide fires, the downtown music scene, and a wealthy uptown real estate family fraying under the strain of the many secrets they keep.

Why you should read the novel

Garth Risk Hallberg’s novel 'City on Fire' offers a sweeping, immersive journey through New York City at a pivotal moment in history. Unlike the compressed format of a television series, the novel allows readers to fully explore the intricate web of characters, backstories, and motivations that make the city pulse with life. With Hallberg’s evocative prose and attention to detail, you feel every emotion and experience each twist alongside the characters themselves. Choosing the book over the TV adaptation means you won't miss the unique narrative layers and stylistic experiments present in Hallberg's writing. The novel delves deeply into its characters’ inner worlds, using different formats such as letters, fanzines, and news clippings to enrich the storytelling. This complex structure adds texture and depth, offering insights and perspectives that simply can’t be replicated on screen. Reading 'City on Fire' is a rewarding challenge, as it invites you to piece together the mysteries and themes at your own pace. Hallberg’s novel is more than just a crime story—it's a panoramic portrait of a city and its people, ultimately offering a richer and more profound experience than any adaptation can provide.

Adaptation differences

The TV adaptation of 'City on Fire' makes significant changes to the novel’s plot, timeline, and character focus. While the original book is set during the 1977 New York City blackout, the show updates the timeline to 2003, fundamentally altering the historical and cultural context that shaped the original narrative. This shift changes the atmosphere and the socio-political backdrop that are so integral to Hallberg’s novel. Characters in the TV series are often composites or have been given new backgrounds and arcs not present in the book. The television version condenses the sprawling cast, omitting some key figures and reducing the complexity of their interconnected stories. Some characters’ motivations and development are either streamlined or entirely reimagined to fit the format and pacing of a streaming series. Hallberg’s experimental narrative structure—featuring various documents, letters, and shifting perspectives—is largely abandoned in the adaptation. The show takes a more conventional approach to storytelling, losing the multi-layered, literary texture that distinguishes the book. As a result, the richness of the interconnected themes and stories is diminished, focusing instead on central mystery elements and more straightforward drama. Finally, the TV series aims for a faster, plot-driven pace, sacrificing much of the contemplative, atmospheric world-building that defines Hallberg’s writing. Key themes such as art, punk culture, and family are handled differently—occasionally simplified for clarity or altered to suit the television audience, thus transforming the novel’s nuanced exploration of its era and city into a more familiar crime thriller format.

City on Fire inspired from

City on Fire
by Garth Risk Hallberg