What an immensely bleak and disheartening read. You can't help but close this book full of anger towards all those who deliberately perpertrate this endless cycle of violence - the gun manufacturers concerned only with profits and markets, the politicians who take lobbyist money and vote against gun control measures, the middlemen and smugglers who facilitate the illicit trade in weapons, the governments who secretly bankroll the illegal acquisition of arms for rebel factions and do nothing to control the spread of arms within and without their own borders.
Written by an investigative journalist, the book travels from South Africa's overwhelmed doctors and morticians to the American National Rifle Association, from the hub of the world's illegal trade in small arms in Ukraine to a gun factory in Turkey, investigating how the gun impacts on different communities - healthcare professionals and undertakers, victims and criminals, terrorists and rebels, police forces and the military, hunters and sportsmen. Depending on which end of the gun they stand, every group has a different perspective, and every group only sees a small part of the overall picture.
It's hard to escape the towering presence of the United States in this book. The world's largest producer of fire-arms, home of the immensely influential NRA, with a worrying rate of injury and fatalities due to gunfire, the US Second Amendment has an impact beyond its own borders. US gun lobbyists actively work against international attempts to halt the spread of illicit weapons. US guns end up in the hands of the very terrorists the governments claims to oppose. The NRA whips up fear in its members by harping on about psycho killers and rogue governments, terrorists, criminals, burglars, rapists - and yet the very guns they champion are in the hands of those monsters. Gun control laws in states bordering Mexico and Canada have a direct impact on homicide rates in those countries - strict gun control, fewer deaths. And the US is almost the only country in the world where the response to gun massacre is not tighter gun control, but relaxation and expansion of existing legislation.
One cannot help but feel, reading this book, that nothing in the world will change until America does. Until America, with its might and power and its ability to be a force for real change in the world, decides that the sheer weight of death and destruction is simply not worth the 'right to bear arms', it is unlikely that any real global gun control could ever succeed. One wonder just how many playground massacres have to take place before that happens...