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One Year in Uvalde

A Story of Hope and Resilience

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From award-winning journalists John Quiñones and María Elena Salinas comes One Year in Uvalde, a narrative that builds on year-long ABC News reporting from Uvalde, Texas, chronicling how the community is forging on through grief with hope and activism in the shadow of tragedy.
Uvalde: 365 was a continuing ABC News series led by the network's Investigative Unit. As part of the initiative, ABC opened a local satellite news bureau in Uvalde, Texas, in the aftermath of the tragic mass shooting at Robb Elementary School, that hosted a rotating crew of correspondents, producers, writers, and technical staff. Their gripping, vital reporting has been featured across all programs and platforms, from Good Morning America to World News Tonight with David Muir.
Award-winning journalists John Quiñones and María Elena Salinas became immersed in the Uvalde community, as their field reporting brought them ever closer to the people of this Texas city. Quiñones, Salinas, and other ABC reporters and producers on the ground documented the lives of victims' families; covered local community events; followed city council, school board, and Texas Legislature meetings; and attended congressional hearings in Washington, D.C., where victims' families have been advocating for gun reform.
One Year in Uvalde synthesizes this year-long story into a timely, humane, and important look at a community's activism and resiliency, as it follows several families and residents while events continue to unfold in the community. The intimate, sensitive reporting of Quiñones, Salinas, and the ABC News team examines a specific time and place in American life, thereby highlighting challenges that we face as a nation.
The authors will be making donations to the following charities that serve the Uvalde community:
*The Uvalde CISD Moving Forward Foundation (https://UvaldeCISDMovingForward.org/)
*The Uvalde Forever Fund of the Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country (www.CommunityFoundation.net)
*Uvalde High School Athletic Department (https://Athletics.UCISD.net)

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    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2023

      Two award-winning journalists write about their work embedded in Uvalde, TX, after the community was devastated by a mass shooting at their elementary school. Following several families and individuals caught in the wake of the tragedy, the book documents a yearlong reporting project. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2024
      Two ABC News journalists report from a small town stricken by mass murder throughout its long aftermath. "What happens when we leave?" write veteran reporters Qui�ones and Salinas. "That's a real part of the story, and we're missing it simply by not being there." Uvalde, Texas, is the site of a horrific school shooting on May 24, 2022. "The fact that the shooter was, in so many ways, one of them, a member of the community, a kid from town, a product of Robb Elementary, shocked many," write the authors. Yet the facts remain: that the shooter was alienated from everyone, the product of a fatherless home with a mother with "a history of drug abuse"--in short, a walking warning sign. That nothing was done doomed 19 children and two adults. However, there were other warning signs that the investigative team turned up. For example, the chief of school police had been demoted from an earlier position, his former boss testifying that if anyone had ever called him, he would have warned the school system against hiring him. The authors' comment is rather bland here: "Records show that the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District (UCISD) might not have fully reviewed Arredondo's records prior to hiring him." Arredondo, who accrued authority and decision-making power to himself, seemed not to realize that he was in charge on the ground--nor, it seems, was anyone else. The better parts of the text are the sensitive, sometimes heartbreaking inquiries into the effects of the deaths of the children on families and the community as a whole. If there's a little too much self-regard by the intrepid journalists, the book will be of interest to counselors and educators, among other readers. Vivid testimony on how violence both tears a community apart and pulls it together.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 10, 2024
      Television journalists Quiñones (Heroes Among Us) and Salinas (I Am My Father’s Daughter) offer a moving yet insufficiently contextualized look at a bereaved community. Following the 2022 murders of 19 fourth-grade students and two teachers at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Tex., producer Cindy Galli suggested that, rather than pull up stakes soon after the killings, an ABC news crew “commit to six months to a year to tell the stories of the families and the community.” Her idea was implemented, and the authors, along with support staff, embedded themselves in the grieving city and patiently worked to establish bonds with parents who’d lost their children and others affected by the massacre. The book’s strongest sections center on the harrowing, in-depth reflections the authors elicited from shooting victims. They include Arnie Reyes, a teacher whose entire class was killed, and 10-year-old Noah Orona, who witnessed the murder of his friends. The authors also loosely chronicle the massacre’s political aftermath, including an unsuccessful push for Texas gun control measures and the search for answers over a delayed law-enforcement response. Despite the authors’ care and thoughtfulness, Galli’s pitch that “the narrative is not in the shooting” but instead “the real story is in the recovery” never stops feeling like a misdirection away from accountability. This unsophisticated approach will leave readers unsatisfied.

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