THE SANDBOX will appeal to all readers who want to know what it really means to lay your life on the line, to support the troops and be supported by them. A good number of today's young adult readers may someday enlist or, God forbid, get drafted. For that reason alone, THE SANDBOX may well be one of the most important books of our time. It's a boot camp experience for the uninitiated, arming readers with foxhole-level knowledge about the realities and consequences of war. To be sure, it touches on some adult content, and the language isn't muted. But war is hell, uncensored, and this book isn't any different.
In raw detail, these essays describe what it's like to lose your personal independence, to become a rank-and-file entity in a foreign land, fighting battles much larger than yourself. It's for those who'd rather hear the authentic voices of "boots-on-the-ground" than the rhetoric of those who would manipulate the facts to their own advantage. And it's for those who believe (or may come to know) that supporting the troops means listening to them, that supporting the war and supporting the troops can mean far different things.
THE SANDBOX offers a mosaic of differing perspectives, written with varying levels of intensity by people from many walks of life. Although each individual essay is compelling, the real power and meaning is written into the collective body of work.
"I think the wars are just too remote for people's minds," Trudeau said. "They see two, three minutes on the evening news, maybe, if they don't look away." Written into these unflinching essays is an unprecedented opportunity for discovery and introspection, for young adult and mature readers whose hearts and minds are truly open. |