Among Murderers
Life after Prison
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- $20.99
Publisher Description
What is it like for a convicted murderer who has spent decades behind bars to suddenly find himself released into a world he barely recognizes? What is it like to start over from nothing? To answer these questions Sabine Heinlein followed the everyday lives and emotional struggles of Angel Ramos and his friends Bruce and Adam—three men convicted of some of society’s most heinous crimes—as they return to the free world.
Heinlein spent more than two years at the Castle, a prominent halfway house in West Harlem, shadowing her protagonists as they painstakingly learn how to master their freedom. Having lived most of their lives behind bars, the men struggle to cross the street, choose a dish at a restaurant, and withdraw money from an ATM. Her empathetic first-person narrative gives a visceral sense of the men’s inner lives and of the institutions they encounter on their odyssey to redemption. Heinlein follows the men as they navigate the subway, visit the barber shop, venture on stage, celebrate Halloween, and loop through the maze of New York’s reentry programs. She asks what constitutes successful rehabilitation and how one faces the guilt and shame of having taken someone’s life.
With more than 700,000 people being released from prisons each year to a society largely unprepared—and unwilling—to receive them, this book provides an incomparable perspective on a pressing public policy issue. It offers a poignant view into a rarely seen social setting and into the hearts and minds of three unforgettable individuals who struggle with some of life’s harshest challenges.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Journalist Heinlein's goals exceed her grasp in this well-intentioned but less-than-insightful look at the lives of three murderers after their release from prison in New York. The questions she poses at the outset are certainly worthy ones ("What is life like for those who have spent several decades in prison and are released into a world in which people and places they once knew have ceased to exist? What is it like to start over from nothing?"), but the answers she uncovers over the course of her roughly two years with the ex-cons are superficial. One of the three men she shadows, Angel Ramos who, at the age of 18, strangled a 16-year-old girl and served 29 years for the crime explains that he understood the rules of life behind bars, but doesn't know how to behave in the outside world. The author's attempts to get readers to sympathize with her protagonists fall short. Ramos feels it was necessary to kill in order "to be who I am," and his assessment of his life offers a chilling and sobering answer to questions about the efficacy of incarceration: "If somebody would have... given me a job, I think it would have changed my life. But then again I wouldn't be living the fantastic life I'm living now."