Seven people happen
to be in Lindbergh’ s Pharmacy on the evening of June 24 in the small college town
of Athens, Georgia, when a would-be mass shooter with a grudge plans to strike. Former
elementary teacher Tina Lamm, beloved by her students, claims that her
secret to being a terrific teacher was “always remembering that, at the end of
the day, they’re someone else’s problem. You do the best you can, you care of
them, you try to educate them, you try to help them, but when the bell rings,
you hand them off to someone else…” She treats them like “temporary amusements,”
knowing “they’re ultimately on their own like the rest of us.”
The Time Has Come by Will Leitch describes
a community confronting the Covid pandemic, climate change, inequality and divided
politics. Tina admits she is disturbed. “How can you look around at everything
and not be disturbed…. To be disturbed is to be human.” She reflects on small-town life: “The thing
about this little town is that everybody knows everybody, and if you’ve been
one of those everybodies longer than people like us have been nobodies, you can
get away with whatever you want.”
Tina is wrong though and the novel describes a diverse set of characters who do
pull together: the drugstore’s owner, a judge’s
widow, a lawyer who is also an activist for youth, a nurse who is also an army
veteran, a local contractor and his gifted son – and an aging music fan who
tends bar at an Athens club.
Only a few
characters lack regrets, and some are more engaging than others.
David, the
character with the least potential, has the most intriguing story. The
middle-aged man has devoted his life to an Athens music club, tending bar and
long recognizing that “everyone was right in his face, all of them drunk,
mocking him with their perfect youth and their whole lives in front of them,
constantly reminding him that everything he was doing was wrong and probably always
had been.” His substance abuse prompts his wife to leave with their young
daughter and that eventually prompts sobriety. “Part of recovery is
understanding that, that you’re just another helpless addict like everybody else.
One of the first things you have to do… was recognize that there’s nothing
special about you.”
During the
pandemic, David helps other addicts with an online group – and one of the most
hopeless and belligerent members drives hundreds of miles seeking David’s help.
David also revives and treasures his relationship with his daughter, an
aspiring musician with a “clear rock-star energy that David knew all too well.
That she wanted to talk to him didn’t make him feel like a good dad. Honestly?
It just made him fee sort of cool.”
Jason, a contractor
and proud parent to a gifted teen, is Republican and often argues with his more
liberal son. He concedes that even in a small town, people can generally be
unfeeling. “The hardest thing about being a parent, in Jason’s view, was that
your children weren’t nearly as special, as protected, as you thought they were….
to you, they were everything. But to the rest of they world, they are just
another lump of flesh – one more tick on the tote board, one more person you’re
stuck behind in traffic…. If he ever lost any of them, he would crumple into a
heap on the floor and never get up. But the rest of the world wouldn’t do anything.
Everyone would just walk around like nothing had happened.”
Daphne, the
nurse who is also army veteran, has returned to hospital work after five years
in the service. The country has changed in those five years, especially with
politics representing a bigger part of daily life: “when she got back, out of
nowhere, people were screaming whatever their political views were in your face
at every opportunity. An they were screaming at you for not screaming yours.”
People were
angry, carrying concealed weapons, and “everyone was just on the edge of losing
it, all the time.” Daphne is determined to do her small part to restore order in
her world, “keep everything in front of her safe, if the person in her care
could be better than they had been when they’d come in that room with her.” And
perhaps “bring the world back to what it was before.”
The book captures the angry despair of our era with a light touch. Kindness,
understanding, listening, cooperation – a rare moment of strangers coming
together to achieve understanding – prevents tragedy from compounding and
spiraling out of control.