Okay, let’s talk a little about Victoria Christopher Murray’s Stand Your Ground: A Novel
Now what is Stand Your Ground about? Truth: we can take this piece of controversially-driven fiction and apply it to our present-day reality. The book serves as the author’s voice/response to a rising American dilemma. A dilemma entailing the killings of unarmed black boys and men.
We've heard and found ourselves touched by their stories over these past few years. And “years” is an understatement to the actual dilemma's history. The murdering of unarmed black boys/men (girls/women as well) has been a recurring American issue before slaves even landed in Jamestown, Virginia in 1619. I mean, let's be for real. What's happening in our community today is a direct reflection of our ancestor's yesteryears. But I’ll digress in this moment by pinpointing some present examples haunting our news feeds. One would be the loss of Trayvon Martin [Sandford, Flordia] back in 2012. Another, Eric Garner [New York City, New York] in 2014. Michael Brown [Ferguson, Missouri] 2014. And one of the latest atrocities, Sandra Bland [Waller County, Texas] 2015.
You’ve all heard these names before. You’ve all heard them recently. And as much as I want to delve into each of their stories, I know it’ll lead this post to a topic for another conversation. A topic I would have to be careful not to get into my feelings about.
As it concerns Stand Your Ground, Murray opens her novel through the focal point of a woman name Janice Johnson. Janice is about to face her worst nightmare: her teenage son is dead. According to the police who arrived at her doorstep late one night, it was a shooting. One in which a white man took her son's life. The argument is whether the man was standing his ground against Janice’s son, or was it an act of murder? The D.A. gets involved alongside the police to build a case against the shooter. Meanwhile, Janice’s husband and brother-in-law organize a roaring protest for justice.
As it concerns Stand Your Ground, Murray opens her novel through the focal point of a woman name Janice Johnson. Janice is about to face her worst nightmare: her teenage son is dead. According to the police who arrived at her doorstep late one night, it was a shooting. One in which a white man took her son's life. The argument is whether the man was standing his ground against Janice’s son, or was it an act of murder? The D.A. gets involved alongside the police to build a case against the shooter. Meanwhile, Janice’s husband and brother-in-law organize a roaring protest for justice.
That’s not all…