If I Don't Make It, I Love You (e-bog) af -
Kleinman, Loren (redaktør)

If I Don't Make It, I Love You e-bog

166,28 DKK (inkl. moms 207,85 DKK)
The result is an important and horrifyingly thick anthology of mass murders...Highly difficult to read in one sitting, but we must not look away. Kirkus Reviews A harrowing collection of sixty narrativescovering over fifty years of shootings in Americawritten by those most directly affected by school shootings: the survivors. ';If I Don't Make It, I Love You,' a text sent from inside a war zone...
E-bog 166,28 DKK
Forfattere Kleinman, Loren (redaktør)
Forlag Skyhorse
Udgivet 3 september 2019
Længde 312 sider
Genrer Sociology
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781510746503
The result is an important and horrifyingly thick anthology of mass murders...Highly difficult to read in one sitting, but we must not look away. Kirkus Reviews A harrowing collection of sixty narrativescovering over fifty years of shootings in Americawritten by those most directly affected by school shootings: the survivors. ';If I Don't Make It, I Love You,' a text sent from inside a war zone. A text meant for Stacy Crescitelli, whose 15-year-old daughter, Sarah, was hiding in a closet fearing for her life in Parkland, Florida, in February of 2018, while a gunman sprayed her school with bullets, killing her friends, teachers, and coaches. This scene has become too familiar. We see the images, the children with trauma on their faces leaving their school in ropes, connected to one another with hands on shoulders, shaking, crying, and screaming. We mourn the dead. We bury children. We demand change. But we are met with inaction. So, we move forward, sadder and more jaded. But what about those who cannot move on? These are their stories. If I Don't Make It, I Love Youcollects more than sixty narratives from school shooting survivors, family members, and community leaders covering fifty years of shootings in America, from the 1966 UT-Austin Towershooting through May 2018's Santa Fe shooting. Through this collection, editors Amye Archer and Loren Kleinmanoffer a vital contribution to the surging national dialogue on gun reform by elevating the voices of those most directly affectedby school shootings: the survivors.