On the Shelf
Firestorm: The Nice Los Angeles Fires and America’s New Age of Catastrophe
By Jacob SoboroffMariner Books: 272 pages, $30
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“What are you supposed to say when the entire community you were born and raised in is wiped off the map, literally burning to the ground before your eyes?” Jacob Soboroff writes in “Firestorm,” out in early January forward of the Palisades and Eaton fires’ first anniversary. “I couldn’t come up with much.”
“Firestorm,” the primary ebook in regards to the Nice Los Angeles Fires of 2025, pulls readers inside Soboroff’s reporter’s pocket book and the almost two relentless weeks he spent protecting the Palisades and subsequent Eaton wildfire. “Fire, it turns out, can be a remarkable time machine,” he writes, “a curious form of teleportation into the past and future all at once.”
The ebook argues the longer term lengthy predicted arrived the morning of Jan. 7. The most expensive wildfire occasion in American historical past, to this point, was compounded by cascading failures and real-time disinformation, ushering in what Soboroff calls America’s New Age of Catastrophe: “Every aspect of my childhood flashed before my eyes, and, while I’m not sure I understood it as I stared into the camera…I saw my children’s future, too, or at least some version of it.”
In late December, Soboroff returned to the Palisades Recreation Heart for the primary time because it burned. Tennis balls popped from the courts down the bluff. Children shrieked across the playground’s ersatz police vehicles, ambulance and fireplace vans — a part of a $30-million public-private rebuild backed by Metropolis Corridor, billionaire actual property developer Rick Caruso and Lakers coach JJ Redick, amongst others.
The solar peeks by way of the morning marine layer as Soboroff stops at a plaque on the only real standing construction, a New Deal-era basketball gymnasium. His mother and father’ names are etched on the high; under them, household, pals, neighbors. It’s virtually a household tree in metallic, commemorating the one-man fundraising efforts of his father, the enterprise developer Steve Soboroff, to restore the native play space. It was additionally the elder Soboroff’s entry level into civic life, the beginning of a profession that later included 10 years as an LAPD police commissioner, a mayoral bid and a 90-day stint as L.A.’s’ fireplace restoration czar.
“All because my dad hit his head at this park,” Soboroff says with a smirk, recalling the incident that set off his father’s neighborhood security efforts.
He checks the previous workplace the place he borrowed basketballs as a child. “What’s happening? Are people still coming to the park?” he asks a Recreation and Parks worker, slipping into man-on-the-street mode.
On a drive down reminiscence lane (Sundown Boulevard), Soboroff jokes he might shut his eyes and hint the road by really feel alone. Previous rows of yard indicators — “KAREN BASS RESIGN NOW” — and tattered American flags, grass and rose bushes push by way of the wreckage. Pompeii by the Pacific.
Jacob Soboroff.
(Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Occasions)
On the nook the place he as soon as ran a lemonade stand, Soboroff FaceTimed his mom on nationwide tv to point out her what remained of the house he was born in. Earlier than the fires, he had by no means fairly turned the microphone on himself.
Through the worst of it, with nobody else round however the roar of the firestorm, “I had to hold it up to myself,” he says. “That was a different assignment than I’ve ever had to do.”
Between dwell pictures with producer Bianca Seward and cameramen Jean Bernard Rutagarama and Alan Rice, Soboroff fields frantic calls from each family members and the sudden contacts, determined for eyes on the bottom. One is from Katie Miller, a former White Home aide who lower contact after the reporter revealed “Separated,” his 2020 ebook on the Trump household separation coverage. Miller, spouse of Trump advisor Stephen Miller, asks him to examine on her in-laws’ residence. “You’re the only one I can see who is there,” she writes. Soboroff confirms the home is gone. “Palisades is stronger than politics in my book,” he replies. For a second, previous divisions vanish. It doesn’t final.
Jacob Soboroff at McNally Avenue and East Mariposa Avenue in Altadena.
(Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Occasions)
He returns residence to Frogtown, modifications out of smoke-soaked garments and grabs just a few hours’ sleep earlier than heading again out. “Yet another body blow from the pounding relentlessness of the back-to-back-to-back-to-back fires,” he writes. Fellow native Palisadian and MS Now colleague Katy Tur flies in to tour the “neighborhood of our youth incinerated.”
After the fires, Soboroff moved straight into protecting the immigration enforcement raids throughout Los Angeles. He struggled to attach with others, although. Perhaps just a little depressed. The ebook didn’t crystallize till April, after a dialog with Jonathan White, a captain within the U.S. Public Well being Service Commissioned Corps, who’s now operating for congress.
“For me, it’s a much more personal book,” Soboroff says. “It’s about experiencing what I came to understand as the fire of the future. It’s about people as much as politics.”
Wanting again — and studying from the fireplace — grew to become a type of launch, he mentioned, as a lot for him as for the town. “What happened here is a lesson for everybody all across the country.”
Rudi, an L.A. native, is a contract artwork and tradition author. She’s at work on her debut novel a few stuttering scholar journalist.

