About This Book
The narrative follows a small town's Independence Day celebrations that mingle private family birthday joys with escalating patriotic pageantry, eventually producing dangerous accidents from fireworks and militaristic spectacle. The resulting shock propels parents, particularly local women and a young woman named Ruth, into public meetings, speeches, and grassroots activism to confront the normalization of violence. Episodes alternate domestic detail, legal wrangling, and satiric character sketches that expose complacency and profiteering tied to the holiday. The work advocates protecting children by replacing destructive displays with peaceful, community-centered alternatives and traces the town's slow shift toward safer celebrations.
About the Author
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