| My ear tracked the sound...the slow roll
of rubber on blue metal, the stealthy crunching undergrowth sound
of something prowling.
When Gail Bell was seventeen, she was shot in the back. Coming
home from evening class later than usual one night, she took a
short cut through the dark streets of new estate, unaware she
was being watched. When a car began following her, she felt a
jolt of fear. Then the car stopped and out of the eerie silence
came a cracking sound as a bullet struck her from behind. The
car sped away and the shooter was never found.
Being shot is a life-altering experience that cries out for explanation,
but for Gail there were bigger mysteries than the identity of
the gunman. In this book, she questions the place of guns in our
social world, and explores the intricate, surprising ways our
minds deal with traumatic shock.
Gail Bell, author of the critically acclaimed and prize-winning
The Poison Principle, uses the
story of her shooting as the basis of this astonishing memoir,
and takes us into a world where lives can be changed forever by
a single gunshot. |