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4.5
Tom Diaz’s exceptionally well-written Tragedy in Aurora covers the 2012 Aurora (Col.) theater mass shooting and skillfully tells the story of one of its victims, Jessica Redfield Ghawi. Jessie was an aspiring sports journalist who, only two months before her tragic death, barely escaped a mall shooting in Toronto, Canada. Following her death, Jessie’s parents Sandy and Lonnie Phillips, who collaborated on this volume, have dedicated their lives to assisting survivors of mass shootings throughout the US.Diaz makes this book so engaging, and informative by brilliantly weaving in cultural and historical material that provides context to the story of Jessie’s death. He refers to gun violence in the year 2012 as “A Devil’s Calendar” as, aside from the Aurora shooting in which 70 people were shot, the country dealt with the trauma of the murder of teen Trayvon Martin by a neighborhood vigilante and the massacre of elementary school kids and school staff in Newtown, Connecticut. Issues explored by Diaz include the evolution of mass shootings in the US, social trends underlying opposition to gun control, shortcomings of the FBI’s instant background check system, the NRA’s history of exploiting the polarization of America, the role of commercial interests in the proliferation of military-style weapons, and the role of unscrupulous scholars in furthering the NRA’s anti-control narrative. Diaz also discusses the splintering and dysfunctionality of the gun violence prevention movement.Apart from telling the story of the horrific rampage in Aurora, this book masterfully identifies historical developments and cultural trends that have led America to be the epicenter of gun-related carnage. Anybody who wishes to be informed about gun violence, mass shootings, and their impact on survivors needs to read this book.