Nora Gross is assistant professor of education at Barnard College, Columbia University. She is coeditor of Care-Based Methodologies: Reimagining Qualitative Research with Youth in US Schools and has produced several documentary films.
"""In this moving account of the impact of gun violence on urban Black boys and their communities, Nora Gross shares hard lessons about the collective impact of gun violence on emotional life, community bonds, learning, and more. Written with care and deep respect, this book is a must-read for anyone interested in the impact of gun violence on urban school communities."" -- Natasha Warikoo, author of 'Race at the Top: Asian Americans and Whites in Pursuit of the American Dream in Suburban Schools' ""Brothers in Grief, an account of the afterlives of gun violence at one high school for Black boys, is simply astonishing. Nora Gross bears witness to these young men as they grieve together and privately, and to the consequences when the school tries to move forward from tragic loss. More than a needed portrait of the hidden tolls of gun violence and of the emotional worlds of Black boys, Brothers in Grief is a model of responsible, reflexive ethnography."" -- Freeden Blume Oeur, author of 'Black Boys Apart: Racial Uplift and Respectability in All-Male Schools' ""Brothers in Grief is a powerful, searing account of the impact of unceasing, premature death as a result of gun violence on the lives of Black teenage boys forever marked by the losses they are forced to endure. In a society that deems their lives eminently disposable and that largely fails to acknowledge their grief, this invaluable ethnographic account takes us inside a year in the life of students at a Philadelphia charter school who must contend with the loss of their friends and classmates and what it means to survive them."" -- Juliet Hooker, author of 'Black Grief/White Grievance: The Politics of Loss'"