Now is Not the Time to Panic by Kevin Wilson
To be a teen in the 90s in small-town Tennessee means going to the community pool, watching daytime TV, or driving listlessly to all the usual haunts. For Frankie, whose triplet brothers don’t shy away from mayhem, it also means having access to a photocopier they somehow procured. She and her new friend Zeke, an artist, revive the copy machine and decide to use it to create something artistic. She writes the words, a manifesto of sorts. He illustrates. And they both splatter the page with a constellation of blood.
After they begin papering the town with their flyer, all kinds of conspiracy theories emerge, causing unease, and then panic, as rumors spread farther afield. By the end of the summer, the havoc they’ve unleashed dismantles their friendship as well.
Twenty years later, a journalist reaches out to Frances, a
semi-successful YA writer, about her involvement. Frances must decide whether
to tell her story, reckoning with her past, or keep silent.
Wilson never disappoints with his exploration of the
phenomenon of combustible human relationships. If you haven’t yet read his
work, The Family Fang and Nothing to See Here are must-reads too.
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