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Focus. Click. Wind.

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

What if your country is involved in an unjust war, and you've lost trust in your own government?

It's 1968, and the Vietnam War has brought new urgency to the life of Billie Taylor, a seventeen-year-old aspiring photojournalist. Billie is no stranger to risky situations, but when she attends a student protest at Columbia University with her college boyfriend, and the US is caught up in violent political upheaval, her mother decides to move the two of them to Canada. Furious at being dragged away from her beloved New York City to live in a backwater called Toronto, Billie doesn't take her exile lightly. As her mother opens their home to draft evaders and deserters, Billie's activism grows in new ways. She discovers an underground network of political protesters and like minds in a radical group based in Rochdale College, the world's first "free" university. And the stakes rise when she is exposed to horrific images from Vietnam of the victims of Agent Orange – a chemical being secretly manufactured in a small town just north of Toronto.

Suddenly she has to ask herself some hard questions. How far will she go to be part of a revolution? Is violence ever justified? Or does standing back just make you part of the problem?


Key Text Features

author's note

chapters

dialogue

epigraph

facts

historical context

literary references

song lyrics

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    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2023
      A 17-year-old uses her camera as a tool for political activism during the Vietnam War. Billie Taylor is a white New York City high school student who is inspired by the work of the photojournalists she admires. She's dating Columbia University freshman Dan Geller, her high school's golden boy. Things come to a head when they attend an anti-war protest at Columbia that turns violent. Billie's single mother, shaken both by the chaos of the nation and Billie's father's desertion of the family, gets a job in Toronto, feeling that Canada is a safer option. Billie resents having to move and makes plans to return to New York. But when her mother begins housing draft evaders, this political engagement leads Billie to connect with a group of radical Americans working against the war through whom she finds unexpected opportunities to fight back. The story is slow to get started, meandering through Billie's traumatic childhood memories, Billie and Dan's relationship, and Billie's job waitressing at a strip club before she is presented with graphic, disturbing evidence of the horrors being perpetrated by the U.S. military in Vietnam and the chance to participate in the resistance. Readers may benefit from Lewis' depiction of the day-to-day realities of young Americans and Canadians during the Vietnam War as well as explorations of the importance of protest and considerations of violence perpetrated in the name of a greater good. Valuable historical content weighed down by a slow-moving plot. (source notes, author's note) (Historical fiction. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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