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In June 1948, 27-year-old petty criminal Caryl Chessman was
sentenced in California on two counts of sexual assault, receiving
two death sentences as punishment in a case that remains one of the
most baffling episodes in American legal history. Maintaining his
innocence of these crimes, Chessman lived in Cell 2455, a
four-by-ten foot space on Death Row in San Quentin for the twelve
years between his sentencing and eventual execution. He spent this
time, punctuated by eight separate stays of execution, writing this
memoir -- a moving and pitiless account of his life in crime and
the early life that produced it. Chessman's clarity of mind and
ability to bring his thoughts directly to the page, even within the
stifling walls of San Quentin, help make this work the most
literate and authentic expose ever written by a criminal about his
crimes.
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