Lone Star Book Blog Tour: At Close Range: A Memoir of Tragedy and Advocacy by Leesa Ross (Review)

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AT CLOSE RANGE: A MEMOIR
OF TRAGEDY AND ADVOCACY
By Leesa Ross
 
Categories: Nonfiction / Memoir / Personal Transformation / Advocacy
Publisher: Texas Tech University Press
Pages: 192
Publication Date: April 15, 2020

Scroll down for the giveaway!

 


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Leesa Ross did not expect to write a book. Neither did she expect the tragedy that her family endured, a horrific and sudden death that led her to write At Close Range. Her debut memoir is the story of what happened after her son Jon died in a freak gun accident at a party. Ross unsparingly shares the complexities of grief as it ripples through the generations of her family, then chronicles how the loss of Jon has sparked a new life for her as a prominent advocate for gun safety.  Before the accident, Ross never had a motivation to consider the role that guns played in her life. Now, she revisits ways in which guns became a part of everyday life for her three sons and their friends.

Ross’s attitude towards guns is thorny. She has collectors and hunters in her family. To balance her advocacy, she joined both Moms Demand Action and the NRA. Through At Close Range, the national conversation about gun control plays out in one family’s catalyzing moment and its aftermath. However, At Close Range ultimately shows one mother’s effort to create meaning from tragedy and find a universally reasonable position and focal point: gun safety and responsible ownership.

Purchase: Texas Tech University Press


“After something tragic overwhelms your life, it takes a while to determine your guilt.”

At Close Range by Leesa Ross is an absolutely heartbreaking account of one mother’s struggle to navigate the unspeakable grief of losing a child and to break down the brick walls of investigative feedback and a coroner’s report that her son died of suicide from a self-inflicted gun-shot wound to the head. Putting things into perspective can be difficult when faced with the fresh wounds of loss, but Leesa refuses to believe her son Jon took his own life. For her, all the evidence pointed to an accidental shooting based on negligence at a friend’s house, but getting the coroner to change his report proves to be a daunting and a virtually impossible task.

At Close Range is a grieving mother’s transition through the natural stages following her son’s death, from shock and despair to advocating gun safety. The transition has been long and arduous for Leesa and her family, but it has brought with it a fair amount of healing and the need to share this painful story. Nothing in this book is easy to read because it is both sad, in terms of tragic loss, and controversial, in terms of saying anything about guns. In the current political and social climate, gun control, safety, and advocacy are hot-button topics. If you kick that gun control hornets’ nest,  be prepared to get stung over and over again. Leesa’s story, however, is not solely about gun control and safety, although her journey has definitely taken her in that direction. At Close Range is also about internalizing the blame and shame that comes from losing a child due to the lack of gun safety and having it labeled as a suicide. Sorting through the avalanche of emotions is Leesa’s burden as she mourns her son and as she dons the investigator hat in her son’s death and seeks the ultimate answer that continues to elude her grasp in the legal quagmire. Leesa firmly believes Jon did not commit suicide, but how do you convince everyone else?

As difficult as this story is to read, it necessarily opens the door for the much-needed questions and conversation about gun control and safety. Leesa Ross and her family are not anti-gun in general, and this story is not about banning or taking away guns but about respecting them, understanding their role in society, and advocating for more awareness and education regarding proper use, storage, and safety. The writing is quite beautiful and honest, filled with raw emotion, anger, love, and hope. Through Leesa’s courageous push for enlightenment and her ultimate involvement in gun awareness, this controversial topic is brought to the forefront through a mother’s lens. Adults need to talk about guns because the children in their lives will likely find themselves around them at some point, whether at a party, at a friend’s house, or in their own home. Leesa needed to tell Jon’s story for her own healing but also to give her son’s life and death meaning and purpose – a legacy for others to learn from and maybe start that conversation with loved ones before another trigger is accidentally pulled.


Enter the giveaway below on or before February 26, 2021, for a chance to win a hardcover copy of At Close Range by Leesa Ross.

I received a free copy of this book from Lone Star Book Blog Tours in exchange for my honest review.


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Leesa Ross is a debut author who’s transformed a tragedy into a mission for safety. After losing a son to a shooting accident, she formed Lock Arms for Life, an educational organization teaching gun safety. A Texas mother of three, she leads Lock Arms, sits on the board of Texas Gun Sense, and belongs to the NRA.

 

GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY!

FIVE WINNERS each get a hardcover copy of At Close Range.

US Only. Ends midnight, CST, 2/26/21

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3 Replies to “Lone Star Book Blog Tour: At Close Range: A Memoir of Tragedy and Advocacy by Leesa Ross (Review)”

  1. What a great review. I’ve just started reading the book, and you are right about the many layers of emotion that the author experienced.

  2. Thank you for your lovely review! It’s true what you say about “kicking the hornet nests.” I’ve been stung many times during this journey to change the dialog about gun safety. But when I look in the eyes of those young students I know I can’t give up. Change is not a sprint, it’s a long slow marathon.