The Weekly Sun Jan 27, 2023

America just reached a tipping point.
New EVs account for more cars on the road than the growth in the auto market. In other words, there are fewer gas powered cars on the road. And with all the tax incentives for EVs, it’s hard to imagine the trend will reverse. All that means that sometime in the past year or so, the U.S. passed peak gasoline. We are never going to buy as much gasoline as we once did.
What will it mean for the American economy and the country’s politics when the fossil fuel industry starts to behave like a shrinking sector? 
At the same time, the renewable energy industry is only limited by its own supply issues. Solar is inevitable. Investment in manufacturing is pouring into once-moribund regions, bringing good-paying technical jobs for non-college workers. What kind of political realignment will come from that kind of economic revitalization flooding into the heartland? The rhetoric of grievance that has driven our national conversation for decades will change. Will it make a difference?

Daren Wang launched Verb Productions in 1996 to produce programming for public radio. Over the following decade, Verb would syndicate two series nationally for public radio, with our programs heard on hundreds of stations throughout the country.

In 2005, Verb Productions shifted focus and became the production company for the Decatur Book Festival. 

The Hidden Light of Northern Fires

Daren Wang’s first novel, published in August 2017 by St. Martin’s Press.

A novel rooted in the remarkable but little-known, true history of the only secessionist town north of the Mason Dixon Line.

When escaped slave Joe Bell collapses in her father’s barn, Mary Willis must ward off Confederate guerrillas and spies, Joe’s vengeful owner, and even her own brother to help the handsome fugitive cross to freedom.

Mary has always been an outcast, an outspoken abolitionist woman in a town of bounty hunters and anti-Union farmers. Helping runaways is the only thing that makes her life in Town Line bearable. As the countryside is riled by the drumbeat of civil war and the promise of an extravagant bounty for the wounded fugitive, Mary finds herself drawn to the stranger in forbidden ways. When rebels cross from nearby Canada intent on killing him, they bring the devastation of the brutal war to the town and the farm, and threaten to destroy all that Mary loves. 

What they’re saying about The Hidden Light of Northern Fires

With rich, colorful strokes, Wang paints a diverse gallery of characters who ring with credibility as the reader acknowledges the flaws of the best and pities the weaknesses of the worst.
Richmond Times Dispatch

Wang dazzles as a literary craftsman in “Hidden Light.
Mississippi Clarion Ledger


The Hidden Light of Northern Fires is splendid—a distinctive clear-eyed perspective on a fresh corner of the Civil War.  The characters are fully alive, wonderfully varied, and the narrative voice is particularly lucid, in sharp contrast with the raving bloody madness of that dark moment in American history.
Charles Frazier
author of Cold Mountain
winner of the 1997 National Book Award

Like Robert Penn Warren who turned again and again to history as a subject for his fiction and poetry, Wang examines not only the facts of the past but also creates a utterly believable possible past—one based on considerable research but only brought to vivid life through the lens of  imagination. The Hidden Light of Northern Fires is a powerful and  important novel about a lost piece of American history.
Natasha Trethewey
United States Poet Laureate, 2012-2014
author of Native Guard
winner of the 2007 Pulitzer Prize

In this fine novel, Daren Wang compellingly depicts the darkness of our country’s greatest era of strife, but he also finds courage and love. The Hidden Light of Northern Fires is a wise and timely book.
Ron Rash
Serena and
Above The Waterfall

The Hidden Light of Northern Fires is so self-assured I’m shocked it’s a debut. Wang’s absorbing and ambitious first novel brings our history to vivid life in scenes that are by turns brutal and breathtakingly lovely. I will carry this story of love and vengeance, ruin and restoration with me for a long, long time. Read it; you will want to pass it on. —
Joshilyn Jackson
The Almost Sisters and
gods in Alabama

An instant classic, this debut novel announces the arrival of a major talent, fully matured.
Da Chen
Colors of the Mountain

From the very first sentence of The Hidden Light of Northern Fires, you know you are in the hands of a masterful storyteller, one who reveals truths, hardships, nuances, and complexities with the eye of an artist. Though set in the past, this is a new story, an important story, one we all need to read. Daren Wang’s first novel is a marvel, and I hope he writes many, many more.
Connie May Fowler
Before Women had Wings and
A Million Fragile Bones

One true sign of a born novelist is the ability to crawl inside characters who come from a world far from the writer’s own time and personal experience. In his ambitious first novel, Daren Wang has done this spectacularly well. The people of his story come alive through the music of their words.  This is a vivid study of a corner of Civil War America that feels fresh and unexplored. Like all the best historical fiction, The Hidden Light of Northern Fires opens a window into the present by exploring the past. 
Mark Childress
Crazy in Alabama and
Georgia Bottoms

The Hidden Light of Northern Fires pulses with visceral emotion, a story where one has the equal and opposite need to quickly turn the page and yet also linger over the palpably beautiful language. A powerful and life-affirming story that asks the important question – are we meant to be free, and if so how? From the intrigue on page one, we are immersed in a world that is in the past, but never gone. With a forbidden love story weaving in and out of the pages, Daren Wang has crafted a novel that will linger in the heart long after its last page.”
Patti Callahan Henry
The Idea of Love and
The Bookshop At Waters End

A moving tale of loyalty and betrayal, violence and retribution, lofty ideals and harsh reality. Daren Wang has shined a light on a hidden corner of a story you thought you knew, revealing a divided America that, like our own, is both strange and true.
Thomas Mullen
Darktown and 
The Last Town on Earth 

Mary Willis makes Scarlett O’Hara look like a whiney brat. Sure, The Hidden Light of Northern Fires brings to life an astounding lost story of the Civil War, but is also a stay-up-all-night, read-it-in-one-sitting novel that looses the corseted ladies of the era onto the real world.
Abbott Kahler
Sin in the Second City, American Rose
and Liar Temptress Soldier Spy

Daren Wang’s luminous first novel, The Hidden Light of Northern Fires, plumbs a national paradox in miniature: Town Line, New York, the only town north of the Mason-Dixon Line to secede from the union. At the center of an impressive array of characters—runaway slaves, confederate agents, vagabonds—is the strong-willed abolitionist Mary Willis, whose difficult family life and tragic love story are the beating heart of this important book: an original take on the mysteries of war that continues to define our nation.
Mark Winegardner
Crooked River Burning and
The Godfather Returns

In Town Line, NY, a hamlet that voted to secede from the Union and declare itself an independent state, the conflict is rendered in microcosm as siblings and friends take up arms against each other. The little-known history that informs The Hidden Light of Northern Fires is nearly as interesting as the vividly portrayed characters who struggle to find the right course of action or to redeem themselves from terrible mistakes. Wang’s engaging novel is a timely reminder of what can happen to a people when human rights are denied and  the civil fabric of  a nation is torn to pieces.
Ed Falco
The Family Corleone

By unearthing a little known piece of history — that a town in western New York voted to secede from the Union at the start of the Civil War — and then applying his fierce imagination to this real-life discovery, Daren Wang transports us into a gripping and complex world of sibling rivalry, forbidden love, breathtaking cruelty, moral clarity, and hard-earned redemption. This excellent and timely novel asks of its characters the same galvanizing question we find ourselves facing today: Which side are you on?
Susan Rebecca White
A Place at the Table

The Weekly Sun 12.26.2022

For the last Weekly Sun of 2022, I dive into what the fusion announcement means for renewable energy, the difference between fission and fusion, and how Einstein’s most famous equation fits into it all. Also, I take a walk through a dying West Virginia steel town that is being resurrected by a whole new iron manufacturing model.

The Weekly Sun 12.23.2022

Hope is a thing with feathers.

Emily Dickinson

More and more, the world we immerse ourselves in is fraught. It’s not just the news that is troubling, but the way we discuss it. Social media makes us miserable, but it also draws us back time and time again.

Of late, my work at ADT Solar has me writing The Weekly Sun, a weekly look at interesting news in the renewable energy field. I’ve been surprised by how much pleasure it brings me. I get to be a little goofy, pick a theme song for the week, and write about progress toward a worthy goal.

It turns out that writing about hopeful things makes you more hopeful. Who knew?

This week I wrote about the quest to find useful things to do with the space around solar panels in utility scale installations. Don’t be surprised in sheep grazing amongst the panels becomes a common sight in coming years. It turns out cows don’t fit and goats have a bad habit of chewing up the wiring and jumping on the panels.

I also look at the federal governments effort to fix the Puerto Rican power grid with solar energy.