"A highly personalized and intimate portrait by a courageous writer who goes beyond cliches and platitudes. The result is a nuanced and deeply personal analysis that allows readers to connect emotionally with the lives of people caught up within, and often destroyed by, our criminal justice system. Imarisha doesn't flinch as she guides us through the difficulties and contradictions, eschewing theory for a much messier reality. Together they explore the questions: People can do unimaginable damage to one another and then what? What do we as a society do? What might redemption look like? Imarisha, dealing with the complexities of her own experience with sexual assault and accountability, brings us behind prison walls to visit her adopted brother Kakamia and his fellow inmate Jimmy Mac McElroy, a member of the brutal Irish gang the Westies. The three lives in this creative nonfiction account are united by the presence of actual harm - sometimes horrific violence. And the prison system has become the heart of America." Walidah Imarisha, from the Introduction.Īngels with Dirty Faces is no romanticized tale of crime and punishment. This is the heart of this country's prison system. When I saw for the first time (but not the last) a mother sobbing and clutching her son when visiting hours were up, only to be physically pried off and escorted out by guards, I knew nothing about that made me safer. "There was a time I believed prisons existed to rehabilitate people, to make our communities safer.
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