A THOUSAND WAYS TO DIE
by police and seven times more likely to be shot dead by another civilian with a gun.” Lee traces this pattern to America’s beginnings, when “an uncleavable relationship between the trade of humans and the trade of guns” contributed to the nation’s bloody foundation. After this historical background, Lee moves around the country, describing how Southern gun traffickers illicitly arm Chicagoans despite the state’s stringent gun control laws, fueling the city’s uncontrollable violence. In New Orleans, he notes how, while reporting during Hurricane Katrina, at least one of his white colleagues makes excuses for police shootings aimed at some of the city’s poorest Black residents. In Massachusetts, he interviews a worker at the Smith \u0026amp\u003B Wesson factory who loses his job after publicly questioning the company’s ethics. Throughout these stories, he weaves in his own personal history, recounting how his grandfather’s and stepbrother’s murders left lasting, traumatic impressions on his extended family. Lee’s experience reinforces one of the book’s key messages—that gun violence is both a byproduct and cause of “the systemic, institutional, and structural racism that feeds it.” At best, Lee’s work is empathetic, analytical, and insightful, drawing subtle connections in clean and conversational prose. Some chapters hold together better than others: “(G)un\u002DCivil Rights,” for example, is cohesive, while “Gigglebox” tends to meander. All in all, the book is a provocative and informative read that expertly blends memoir with hard\u002Dhitting reporting. "
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Organized as a run of worst-case scenarios, avalanches, shark encounters, buildings coming down, this survival guide uses each disaster as a hook for teaching the actual protocol a person would need ...
Our Review
Organized as a run of worst-case scenarios, avalanches, shark encounters, buildings coming down, this survival guide uses each disaster as a hook for teaching the actual protocol a person would need in that moment, rather than just cataloging danger for its own sake. The scenario-based structure means a teen can read it piece by piece instead of front to back, and each one ends up teaching risk assessment and decision-making under pressure that extends past the specific disaster described. At 200 paperback pages, it's built to be picked up and dropped into rather than read in one sitting.
The tone matters as much as the content: it treats safety as something a teen can act on rather than just something to be afraid of, so the high-stakes scenarios function as teaching tools instead of scare tactics. That's a useful distinction for a reluctant 12-to-18-year-old reader who wouldn't pick up a straightforward safety manual but will read something with actual stakes attached to the advice. It's a reasonable pick for a family that wants risk-awareness content in the house without it reading like a textbook; the adrenaline is doing the work that usually falls to a lecture. Goodreads puts it at 4.45 from 64 ratings.
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