An NPR education reporter shows how the pandemic disrupted children's
lives--and how our country has nearly always failed to put our children
first
The onset of COVID broke a 150-year social contract between America and
its children. Tens of millions of students lost what little support they
had from the government--not just school but food, heat, and physical
and emotional safety. The cost was enormous.
But this crisis began much earlier than 2020. In The Stolen Year, Anya
Kamenetz exposes a long-running indifference to the plight of children
and families in American life and calls for a reckoning.
She follows families across the country as they live through the
pandemic, facing loss and resilience: a boy with autism in San Francisco
who gains a foster brother and a Hispanic family in Texas that loses a
member to COVID, and finds solace when they need it most. Kamenetz also
recounts the history that brought us to this point: how we thrust
children and caregivers into poverty, how we over-police families of
color, how we rely on mothers instead of infrastructure. And how our
government, in failing to support our children through this tumultuous
time, has stolen years of their lives.