Uvalde's darkest hour

Craig Garnett

Book - 2024

"When the police scanner announced an active shooter at Robb Elementary on May 24, 2022, Uvalde Leader-News staff writers held their collective breath. In those confusing and terrifying moments, these journalists embarked on coverage that no community newspaper should ever have to undertake. Among that five-person staff was Kimberly Rubio, whose 10-year-old daughter Lexi was killed in her classroom along with 18 classmates and two teachers. The trauma of that loss and the second tragedy-the 77 minutes that law enforcement waited to rescue children from an 18-year-old mass murderer-shattered faith in the community's most trusted institutions. Craig Garnett, owner and publisher of the Uvalde Leader-News, has compiled first-hand acco...unts that follow the community's halting steps toward healing and Kimberly Rubio's simultaneous plunge into activism. This chilling story, told with both clear-eyed journalistic integrity and gripping emotional intensity, chronicles the horrific chain of events, introduces readers to the principal actors, and relates the aftermath as the community tries to heal, to make sense of the incomprehensible, and to seek meaningful change on the local and state level. As readers follow this journey, there will be moments when the sheer tragedy may cause them to put the book aside. But the people whose lives are revealed here have no such luxury. This is their story"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
College Station : Texas A&M University Press [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Craig Garnett (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 227 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 213-214) and index.
ISBN
9781648432996
  • A gallery of images follows
  • Author's Note
  • 1. Sounds of Emergency
  • 2. The "Mexican School"
  • 3. Celebration
  • 4. Into Darkness
  • 5. 552 Diaz Street
  • 6. "Shut it Down"
  • 7. 77 Minutes
  • 8. "Let Us Go in"
  • 9. Asylum
  • 10. Medical Emergency
  • 11. Reunification
  • 12. Job from Hell
  • 13. Notification
  • 14. Invasion
  • 15. "It Could Have Been Worse"
  • 16. "Make it Black"
  • 17. "Look What They Did"
  • 18. Outpouring
  • 19. Never-Ending Funeral
  • 20. "Fire the Cowards"
  • 21. Advocating for Angels
  • 22. A Monumental Project
  • 23. Failure Becomes Official
  • 24. Goodbye, Chief(s)
  • 25. Back to School
  • 26. A Widening Divide
  • 27. Dia de los Muertos
  • 28. Vote Him Out
  • 29. Survivors
  • 30. Happy Birthday
  • 31. Banking on Grief
  • 32. Twenty-One for Twenty-One
  • 33. More Bitter than Sweet
  • 34. "Where is the Empathy?"
  • 35. Where to from Here?
  • Afterword
  • Note on Sources
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Garnett, owner of the Uvalde Leader-News, recaps in this harrowing debut how he and his team of reporters covered the worst school shooting in Texas history, which left two teachers and 19 fourth-graders dead. Garnett surveys events leading up to the massacre at Robb Elementary in May 2022, the horrific day itself, and the unsatisfying aftermath, which left surviving family members wondering why 77 law enforcement officers delayed confronting the shooter for over an hour, despite clear guidance instituted after the 1999 Columbine massacre that first responders must "confront the shooter as quickly as possible." He spotlights the bravery of the children caught in the rampage, one of whom advised a classmate to coat herself in a friend's blood to appear dead. He also delves into warning signs exhibited by the murderer, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos, a former Robb Elementary student, who gave plenty of indications on social media of his homicidal intentions; as Garnett points out, Ramos was nicknamed " 'Yubo's school shooter' on the French social networking app of that name." Throughout, Garnett emphasizes how, as members of the mourning community (the child of an Uvalde Leader-News staff reporter was killed), his team placed limits on the lengths they would go in service of the story, in contrast with nonlocal media, which he characterizes as careless and mercenary. It's an essential, up-close view of the tragedy in Uvalde. (Nov.)

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