Two Years, Six Lives, and the Long Journey Home
by Lauren Kessler
95 percent of the millions of American men and women who go to prison eventually get out. What happens to them?
There's Arnoldo, who came of age inside a maximum security penitentiary, now free after nineteen years. Trevor and Catherine, who spent half of their young lives behind bars for terrible crimes committed when they were kids. Dave, inside the walls for 34 years, now about to reenter an unrecognizable world. Vicki, a five-time loser who had cycled in and out of prison for more than a third of her life. They are simultaneously joyful and overwhelmed at the prospect of freedom. Anxious, confused, sometimes terrified, and often ill-prepared to face the challenges of the free world, all are intent on reclaiming and remaking their lives.
What is the road they must travel from caged to free? How do they navigate their way home?
A gripping and empathetic work of immersion reportage, Free reveals what awaits them and the hundreds of thousands of others who are released from prison every year: the first rush of freedom followed quickly by institutionalized obstacles and logistical roadblocks, grinding bureaucracies, lack of resources, societal stigmas and damning self-perceptions, the sometimes overwhelming psychological challenges. Veteran reporter Lauren Kessler, both clear-eyed and compassionate, follows six people whose diverse stories paint an intimate portrait of struggle, persistence, and resilience.
The truth―the many truths―about life after lockup is more interesting, more nuanced, and both more troubling and more deeply triumphant than we know.
"In this empathetic and visceral account, journalist Kessler documents the achievements and setbacks of six formerly incarcerated people as they attempt to reenter society...Her immersion into her subjects' lives allows Kessler to convey to readers the immense challenges of life after prison. This powerful argument in favor of a better support system for those who have served their time rings true." - Publishers Weekly
"Piercing, poignant...Free is a sobering, necessary mirror. What does this system say about us? Where will we go from here, and how—and most urgently, when?" - Shelf Awareness: Maximum Shelf
"Free is an important contribution to the body of incarceration literature. It is also a captivating read: each chapter and each story makes you eager to read the next." - Laura Bates, author of Shakespeare Saved My Life: Ten Years in Solitary with the Bard
"With tenderness and empathy, Lauren Kessler speaks to how and where we fail the thousands of individuals coming out of prison every year. Kessler asks us to get to know these six men and women and to come to understand and celebrate their remarkable journeys. I love the writing in this important and timely book. These moving stories will stay with you." - Alex Kotlowitz, bestselling author of There Are No Children Here
"If mass incarceration is one of the great moral crises of our time, then how we treat those who are recently freed is just as much of a travesty. The stories Lauren Kessler shares in Free show how prison changes people and fails to set them up for success on the outside. Lauren integrates data with compelling vignettes to illustrate a better way forward for those who will be released from prison." - Eric Garcia, author of We're Not Broken: Changing the Autism Conversation
This information about Free was first featured
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Lauren Kessler is an award-winning author, (semi) fearless immersion reporter and narrative nonfiction writer who combines lively storytelling with deep research to explore everything from the hidden world of a maximum security prison (A Grip of Time: When Prison Is Your Life) to the seemingly romantic but oh-go-gritty world of ballet (Raising the Barre: Big Dreams, False Starts and My Midlife Quest to Dance The Nutcracker) to the surprisingly vibrant world of those with Alzheimer's (Finding Life in the Land of Alzheimer's). She has dived into the wild, wild west of the anti-aging movement (Counterclockwise: My Year of Hypnosis, Hormones, Dark Chocolate and Other Adventures in the World of Antiaging) and weathered the stormy seas of the mother-daughter relationship (My Teenage Werewolf).
Her books have been Washington Post and Los Angeles Times bestsellers, Wall Street Journal "best" selections, Pacific Northwest Book Award winners, and Oregon Book Award winners. She is a national speaker and workshop leader who has twice been a guest on the late/great David Letterman Show. Her journalism has appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Los Angeles Times Magazine, O magazine, Ladies Home Journal, Prevention, Woman's Day, Utne Reader, the Nation, newsweek.com, and salon.com.
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