This is a heartbreaking story about the author and his family's loss on the day of the Parkland High School shooting in Florida, Feb. 14, 2018. It focuses on the helpers who came into their lives when Fred Guttenberg lost his brother Michael to eventual cancer from the carcinogens he had inhaled as a first responder at the World Trade Center on 9/11 and when they lost Jaime to a shooter less than 6 months later. The helpers varied: other first responders, the other Parkland parents, family, friends and even strangers and politicians. Notably, he remembers not hearing any empathetic statement from non-helper President Trump but getting a long and surprising phone call from helper Biden, who said all the right things and kept the focus on the family's grief and stories of their daughter, lending an unselfish and sympathetic ear.
The book also focuses on his goal after Jaimie's death--to get common sense gun safety laws on the books. Many helpers have helped him with this focus, too, both Republicans and Democrats and Americans like himself. He insists he's not against the second amendment, but he does want to see military style weapons out of the hands of everyday folks and other laws like raising the age for gun ownership, better background checks, safe gun storage, etc. I agree with his mission. I'm a gun owner myself, having inherited some guns from my hunting kin. A few years ago, a gun out the kitchen window came in handy to shoot a groundhog eating the cabbages in my garden! Common sense gun laws would not have affected my gun ownership or the fate of that groundhog! Those laws might, however, save a few more human lives.
Gun violence is, of course, a complex issue. Societal deterioration, lack of enforcement of red flag laws, mental illness and lack of easy access to therapy, Internet influencers and social media, and many other problems lead to gun violence. It will take much more than just better gun safety laws t0 resolve the issue, but it's a start.
I give this book 3 stars because it's a difficult book to read and I sometimes found the author a little too confrontational in his goal, though that may be understandable considering his anger and grief. For one thing, he insists on standing when he is talking about Jaime and gun control because he doesn't want to be comfortable in the discussion. This seemed strange to me as standing while others are sitting seems like a threatening posture. Otherwise, the book is well-written and presents a compelling, thought-provoking story.