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Laddar... Columbineav Dave Cullen
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Top Five Books of 2013 (777) » 18 till Favourite Books (828) Five star books (302) Books Read in 2017 (915) True Crime Books (41) Books Read in 2021 (3,792) True Crime (75) Books Read in 2009 (192) Edgar Award (43) Det finns inga diskussioner på LibraryThing om den här boken. David Cullen’s non-fiction Columbine is something of a paragon in the true crime / non-fiction about real life tragedies world, a highly regarded example of how to write about a sensitive and terrible topic with empathy and journalistic precision. And after reading it I can well understand why, Cullen’s prose is immediate and urgent without being sensational it’s informative and meticulous without losing its narrative thread in the minutiae. First, a note about the event itself. I took an active shooter training recently for work and the speaker told us to think back to a time before we were aware of threats like school shooters, to a time before we identified multiple exits upon entering somewhere new. For me that time never existed, or did sometime before I could remember it. I recall being in elementary school and hearing all about Columbine over and over again. I was always aware that my school could be a site of danger and devastation. This awareness only heightened over the years for obvious reasons. But despite hearing about the event as a child and teen, I realized I knew little of the concrete facts of what happened. This struck me as odd so I read David Cullen’s book. Columbine was difficult to read; it certainly wasn’t fun or what I would call enjoyable. But the author did what he set out to do, his goal in writing, as far as I could tell, was to tell the complete story of the Columbine shooting, from planning, to the day itself, to the fallout and impact on individuals, families, and the nation. This aim was ambitious but it was (in my opinion) achieved. I wish all non-fiction titles were as comprehensive, as in depth, as this book was. The tragedy itself is given appropriate weight, but the author doesn’t neglect the aftershocks of the event, the way it changed the Columbine community and the nation, the way it has been remembered and misremembered ever since it happened. Indeed, Cullen takes care to point out numerous myths that surround the shooting, noting their origin and providing evidence debunking them. The killers idolized Marilyn Manson, their murder spree was the result of bullying, they targeted an evangelical Christian girl and murdered her when she professed her faith, all of these were things I had taken for fact but in reality are all incorrect, rumors with a long half-life. This kind of journalistic rigor is what set this book apart for me. Far more than just a catalog of atrocities, Columbine places the events of the shooting in proper context while also making sense of the legacy this tragedy had on our country. This book is a very solid piece of investigative journalism that sheds light on what really happened in Columbine as opposed to what the media reported. In many ways, the reality is even more sad and tragic than the press version. As a parent of a teenage boy, I couldn't help but feel terribly sorry for the parents of Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold. Their sons truly managed to ruin their lives as well as their own. It's hard to put a lot in a review about the book without spoiling, but I loved the way the author gave perspective from the killers, the killers' parents, and the victims in this case. I also think it was extremely revealing (and somewhat disturbing) in how it portrays our justice system and how some things just get "swept under the rug" or dismissed. I'll leave it up to future readers to decide for themselves whether or not this crime was preventable, but the evidence makes it hard not to draw a conclusion. It proves that a charming surface can totally mask a criminal who lacks an iota of empathy. And that's a pretty scary thought!
Ten years in the making and a masterpiece of reportage, "Columbine" is an award-winning journalist's definitive account of one of the most shocking massacres in American history. Inga biblioteksbeskrivningar kunde hittas. |
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![]() GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)373.7888Social sciences Education Secondary; Academic; Preparatory North America Western U.S. ColoradoKlassifikation enligt LCBetygMedelbetyg:![]()
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I didn't think i would be able to read it all the way trough without taking a break. This wasn't true. The author lays out the scope and sequence very well. I found myself compelled to keep reading. (