Life After Murder: Five Men in Search of Redemption
Autor Nancy Mullaneen Limba Engleză Hardback – 25 iun 2012
Once
a
murderer,
always
a
murderer?
Or
can
a
murderer
be
redeemed?
Who
do
they
really
become
after
they
have
served
decades
in
prison?
What
does
it
take
for
a
killer
to
be
accepted
back
into
society?
What
is
the
chance
that
he
will
kill
again?
Award-winning
journalist
Nancy
Mullane
found
herself
facing
these
questions
when
she
accepted
an
assignment
to
report
on
the
exploding
costs
of
incarceration.
But
the
men
she
met
behind
the
walls
astonished
her
with
their
remorse,
introspection,
determination,
and
unshakable
hope
for
freedom
and
forgiveness.
Life After Murderis an intimately reported, utterly compelling story of five convicted murderers sentenced to life with the possibility of parole, who discover after decades in prison that their second chance, if it comes at all, is also the challenge of a lifetime. It follows their struggle for redemption, their legal battles to make good on the state's promise of parole, and the lives they found after so many years inside.
Life After Murderis an intimately reported, utterly compelling story of five convicted murderers sentenced to life with the possibility of parole, who discover after decades in prison that their second chance, if it comes at all, is also the challenge of a lifetime. It follows their struggle for redemption, their legal battles to make good on the state's promise of parole, and the lives they found after so many years inside.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781610390293
ISBN-10: 1610390296
Pagini: 384
Ilustrații: none
Dimensiuni: 243 x 161 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.73 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
ISBN-10: 1610390296
Pagini: 384
Ilustrații: none
Dimensiuni: 243 x 161 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.73 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Notă biografică
Nancy
Mullaneis
Executive
Producer
of
the
national
podcast,
Life
of
the
Law,
and
develops,
reports,
and
produces
feature
stories
for
Public
Radio
International's
This
American
Life,
National
Public
Radio,
and
the
NPR
affiliate
KALW
News-Crosscurrents
in
San
Francisco.
She
is
a
member
of
the
Society
for
Professional
Journalists,
the
Association
of
Independents
in
Radio,
and
the
International
Women's
Media
Foundation.
In
2009,
she
was
awarded
a
Soros
Justice
Media
Fellowship,
and
in
2011,
Nancy
was
the
recipient
of
a
National
Edward
R.
Murrow
Award.
In
2013
her
book,Life
After
Murderwas
honored
with
the
National
Council
on
Crime
and
Delinquency's
Media
for
a
Just
Society
Book
Award.
Recenzii
“A
radio
journalist
immerses
herself
in
the
lives
of
five
murderers
incarcerated
in
San
Quentin
State
Prison
in
California.
NPR
reporter
and
producer
Mullane
received
remarkable
cooperation
from
the
prison
staff
as
well
as
her
subjects
as
they
sought
parole
for
good
behavior
and
changed
character….
An
impressive
investigative
work
with
interesting
findings
that
tend
to
contradict
conventional
wisdom.”
Publishers
Weekly“Can a murderer be redeemed? This is Mullane’s central theme in her revealing book of five murderers who all served lengthy sentences in California’s notorious San Quentin Prison, now seeking to live out the remainder of their tainted lives without condemnation or reproach. Without any attempt to excuse their crimes, Mullane offers a highly charged exposé of this quintet of hopeful ex-cons battered by a wicked tangle of red tape and penal regulations, along with an unsympathetic outside world that refuses to either forget or forgive their transgressions. With their fates in the hands of the governor and the parole board, very few lifers are released, Mullane writes, and often wait up to 15 years between parole hearings. Boasting gripping, top-notch journalism, Mullane pierces the myth of the unredeemable killer with these portraits of troubled men in a society that fears and reviles them.”
Columbia
Journalism
Review
Amy Bach, author ofOrdinary Injustice: How America Holds Courtand executive director, Measures for Justice
“What happens when men who have committed heinous crimes are released from prison? Nancy Mullane first met her five characters while they were serving life sentences for murder. She persuaded corrections officials to give her unheard of access to the inmates. Then, in an extraordinary turn of events, Mullane documented their unexpected release back into society. Her remarkable on-the-ground reporting should elicit soul-searching from the Left, Right, and Center. If these five former inmates can lead responsible, productive lives after decades in maximum-security prisons, can they show us the way toward a new policy that combines fiscal responsibility, public safety, and genuine remorse? Read this unusual story, and let the debate begin.…”
KirkusReview
“Life
After
Murderis
as
much
a
study
of
jarring
re-entries
as
it
is
a
chronicle
of
redemption
and
hope.
But
it’s
also
the
story
of
Mullane’s
own
transformation
from
frightened
observer
to
cheerleading
sympathizer.
The
Nancy
Mullane
who
dines
easily
with
parolee
Reed,
invites
convicts
home
for
dinner
with
her
family,
and
finds
herself
emotionally
invested
in
their
triumphs
is
a
far
cry
from
the
woman
who
approached
San
Quentin
with
such
quavering
timidity
in
the
opening
chapter—a
woman
acutely
aware
both
of
her
own
vulnerabilities
and
the
imperviousness
of
surroundings
which
were,
for
her,
only
temporary….
Reading
along—at
home,
out
and
about,
somewhere
you
choose
to
be—you
may
find
yourself
undergoing
a
similar
change.”
Minneapolis Star-Tribune
“It's the relationships Mullane builds, and the stories she tells -- particularly those of the five paroled murderers who compose the central focus of the book -- that move the book beyond policy analysis and into something profoundly human…. Their stories are complicated and compelling. When these men meet obstacles, as they surely do, you will be shocked by your desperation to turn the pages and learn that things work out for them.”
Minneapolis Star-Tribune
“It's the relationships Mullane builds, and the stories she tells -- particularly those of the five paroled murderers who compose the central focus of the book -- that move the book beyond policy analysis and into something profoundly human…. Their stories are complicated and compelling. When these men meet obstacles, as they surely do, you will be shocked by your desperation to turn the pages and learn that things work out for them.”
Michelle
Alexander,
legal
scholar
and
author
ofThe
New
Jim
Crow:
Mass
Incarceration
in
the
Age
of
Colorblindness
“Life After Murderchallenges us to do the unthinkable––view those accused of horrible crimes as worthy of our concern. Nancy Mullane, a white woman who was once just as ignorant about the real world of crime and punishment as the typical television viewer, takes us on a remarkable journey behind bars. Through the stories of five unforgettable men, we are reminded of the power and possibility of redemption, as well as the nearly unforgiveable crime our nation has committed: treating some human beings as disposable.”
“Life After Murderchallenges us to do the unthinkable––view those accused of horrible crimes as worthy of our concern. Nancy Mullane, a white woman who was once just as ignorant about the real world of crime and punishment as the typical television viewer, takes us on a remarkable journey behind bars. Through the stories of five unforgettable men, we are reminded of the power and possibility of redemption, as well as the nearly unforgiveable crime our nation has committed: treating some human beings as disposable.”
“[Mullane’s]
account
manages
to
put
human
faces
on
people
who
are
too
often
demonized
by
the
media—and
then
forgotten.
As
its
title
suggests,Life
After
Murdermakes
a
strong
argument
that
a
sane
sentencing
policy
should
address
the
reality
that,
long
after
even
the
most
terrible
sins
of
youth,
people
can
change.”
Relevant“The Last Hunger Seasonis a beautiful story, and readers will find themselves pulling for these farmers to make it…. Thurow makes it clear this is the solution for Africa’s repeated food crises. There are challenges—training a whole continent of farmers, adequate storage for grains, better seeds, and transportation to bigger markets—but they are all surmountable with the will and resources. These farmers have experienced their last hunger season. There is no reason why the rest of the world’s one billion hungry people can’t do the same.”
Ebony
“Fascinating.”
San
Francisco
Chronicle
“As
Mullane
shows
through
her
immersion
reporting
into
the
lives
of
five
murderers
-
before
they
killed,
while
imprisoned
and
after
their
parole
-
nothing
is simple.”
Baltimore
City
Paper