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Life on the Outside - The Prison Odyssey of Elaine Bartlett (Paperback, 1st Picador ed)
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Life on the Outside - The Prison Odyssey of Elaine Bartlett (Paperback, 1st Picador ed)
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List price R531
Loot Price R502
Discovery Miles 5 020
You Save R29 (5%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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A National Book Award Finalist "Heartbreaking...moving and
well-reported...Revelatory."--"The New York Times Book Review"
(Front Page)"Life on the Outside" tells the story of Elaine
Bartlett, who spent sixteen years in Bedford Hills prison for
selling cocaine--a first offense--under New York's Rockefeller drug
laws. The book opens on the morning of January 26, 2000, when
Bartlett is set free and returns to New York City. At 42, she has
virtually nothing: no money, no job, no real home. All she does
have is a large and troubled family, including four children, who
live in a decrepit housing project on the Lower East Side. "I left
one prison to come home to another," Elaine says. Over the next
months, she clashes with her daughters, hunts for a job, visits her
son and husband in prison, negotiates the rules of parole, and
campaigns for the repeal of the laws that led to her long prison
term. Russell Simmons, founder of Def Jam Records, says: "At a time
when the prison-industrial complex is destroying African American
families and neighborhoods, Elaine Bartlett is more than a
survivor: she is a heroine. The future of our communities depends
on women like her.""[A] stirring and ultimately heartbreaking book
on what it means to leave prison . . . A remarkably balanced
triumph of immersion journalism."--"The Washington Post""[This]
book should take its place among [the] classics of urban
sociology."--"Mother Jones""Bracingly compassionate, quietly
outraged."--"Village Voice""[It] will keep you reading through the
night ....This book is a triumph of storyte"lling."--Alex
Kotlowitz, author of There are No Children Here "and "The Other
Side of the Rive"rdn0 Jennifer Gonnerman is a prizewinningstaff
writer for "The Village Voice," She has also written for "The New
York Times Magazine" and many other publications. Her article on
which this book is based won the Livingston Award for Young
Journalists in 2001.
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