An intimate and powerful rumination on American gun violence by Paul Auster, one of our greatest living writers and “genuine American original” (The Boston Globe), in an unforgettable collaboration with photographer Spencer Ostrander
Like most American boys of his generation, Paul Auster grew up playing with toy six-shooters and mimicking the gun-slinging cowboys in B Westerns. A skilled marksman by the age of ten, he also lived through the traumatic aftermath of the murder of his grandfather by his grandmother when his father was a child and knows, through firsthand experience, how families can be wrecked by a single act of gun violence.
In this short, searing book, Auster traces centuries of America’s use and abuse of guns, from the violent displacement of the native population to the forced enslavement of millions, to the bitter divide between embattled gun control and anti-gun control camps that has developed over the past 50 years and the mass shootings that dominate the news today. Since 1968, more than one and a half million Americans have been killed by guns. The numbers are so large, so catastrophic, so disproportionate to what goes on elsewhere, that one must ask why. Why is America so different—and why are we the most violent country in the Western world?
Product details
Publisher : Grove Press (Feb. 14 2025)
Language : English
Paperback : 160 pages
ISBN-10 : 0802163580
ISBN-13 : 978-0802163585
Item weight : 505 g
Best Sellers Rank: #292,266 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#179 in Photojournalism (Books)
#213 in Criminal Law Enforcement (Books)
#566 in Violence in Society (Books)
Customer Reviews: 4.4
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