Post #135563
January 29, 2019, 05:46:24 PM
My wife works in residence life at a university, so she joined the group that chooses next year's freshman common read (the book that all incoming freshman will read so they have something in common to talk about, I guess, or maybe there's a first-year class that will talk about it?).
Just finished reading #NeverAgain, one of the candidate books, which is a sort of an autobiography/"manifesto" written by David and Lauren Hogg, two of the survivors of the Parkland Shooting last year.
I enjoyed the autobiographical parts (I've always enjoyed biographies) as the two siblings recounted their childhood and the lead-up to the shooting as well as the shooting itself, their reactions to it, and the beginning of the whole March for Our Lives movement. The second-to-last chapter included ten actual policy points (like universal background checks, banning high-capacity magazines, ending interstate gun trafficking, funding of gun violence research, etc.), which I thought was useful so that it wasn't just rhetoric. Also, the final chapter was quite enlightening as it listed every person who was killed in a school shooting since Columbine, which was more than I realized.
David comes across as a bit narcissistic, though, as he (I think unintentionally) reveals that he is driven by a need to be known and remembered, which seems to be competing with his fight for justice -- his younger sister, however, seems quite genuine and broken from the loss of her friends. He was also quite defensive about all the attacks and conspiracies targeted at him in the media and then talked about all the "sick burns" his classmates made on Twitter, which seemed a bit smug -- like, all the kids totally pwned the trolls and haters, yo.
Overall, I'd give it a 3/5. An interesting and quick read if you want to know more about the subject from firsthand survivors.