Fire Watch (short story)


"Fire Watch" is a science fiction novelette by American writer Connie Willis. The story, first published in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine in February 1982, involves a time-traveling historian who goes back to the Blitz in London, to participate in the fire lookout at St. Paul's Cathedral.
The protagonist has a deep emotional attachment to the Cathedral and is highly devoted to his role in defending it - especially due to his bitter knowledge that St. Paul's would survive the World War II bombings but would be obliterated in a terrorist attack in the protagonist's own time.

Reception

The story won both a Hugo Award for Best Novelette and a Nebula Award for Best Novelette.

Relationships to other Willis works

"Fire Watch" was included in Willis' short-story collections Fire Watch and The Best of Connie Willis: Award-Winning Stories.
The idea of a time-traveling history department at Oxford University, introduced in this novelette, was also used in her later novels Doomsday Book, To Say Nothing of the Dog, and Blackout/All Clear, as was the character of Professor James Dunworthy.
Although Willis' writing of "Fire Watch" predates the production of Doomsday Book by about a decade, Kivrin Engle, the main character of Doomsday Book, also appears as a minor character in "Fire Watch". The novelette references Engle's experience with the Black Plague while time-traveling in the 14th century.