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This title in other editionseBook editionsMother California: A Story of Redemption Behind Barsby Kenneth E. Hartman
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:In 1980, Kenneth Hartman murdered a homeless man in a Los Angeles park after a drug-fueled binge. Sentenced to life without parole by the state of California, Hartman was soon considered a potent force by the system"s most brutal convicts. To the hellish chaos of a maximum-security prison he brought his own limitless propensity for violence--he often spent months at a time in solitary confinement, 'the Hole.' After years in the cold embrace of the state prison system, Hartman discovered a vocation for writing; he also met, through a chance phone call, the woman he would marry and have a child by. With poignancy and self awareness, Hartman chronicles the anarchy and brutish moral code that rules in some of the world"s most infamous prisons, where physical punishment is the only form of control. Over time, Hartman evolves into a sentient being; follows his newly discovered spiritual and literary inclinations; and learns to deal with his demanding responsibilities as a family man. The final chapter describes his development of the Honor Program, which helps motivated prisoners escape the ravages of incarceration. Mother Californiais the story of a man who did not succumb to the darkness of the only world left to him. It offers definite proof that there is no such thing as a life beyond redemption. Review:"In this memoir, a magnificent inquiry into the human condition, a man serving a life sentence in the California prison system documents the brutality and inhumanity of life 'inside,' where criminals are victimized rather than rehabilitated, and chaos flowers among the despairing. Hartman, an eloquent, middle-aged prisoner convicted of murder at 19, tells a sad but unsentimental story: a rough childhood and a wish for invincibility fueled Hartman's youth and downfall, but in the time since, he has married in prison, fathered a child, and currently works to improve the broken U.S. prison system. Hartman discovered his talent in a writing class, after having abandoned drugs; using it, he examines up close the 'mad, violent circus' of prison life, his place in it, and the fate of his fellow prisoners: 'Under the big tent of this brutally unnatural environment, few of us ever take the frightening step of analyzing our deeper motives.'" Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.) Synopsis:The fierce and affecting memoir of a convicted murderer, whose growing self-awareness enables him to understand his crime and achieve redemption. Synopsis:Memoir of a convicted murderer whose growing self-awareness over decades of incarceration enable him to understand his own crime and achieve his own redemption.
Synopsis:The fierce and affecting memoir of a convicted murderer, whose growing self-awareness enables him to understand his crime and achieve redemption.
Synopsis:Thirty years ago, when Kenneth Hartman was nineteen, he murdered a homeless man in a Los Angeles park. Sentenced to life without parole, Hartman gradually evolved into a devoted husband, father, and prison reform activist. Mother Californiaoffers definite proof that there is no such thing as a life beyond redemption. Synopsis:In 1980, Kenneth E. Hartman was sentenced to a life term in prison for a murder he committed as a violent, drug-addicted nineteen-year-old. Over twenty-eight years, he transformed from a brutal inmate to a student of philosophy, a reader of books, a writer, a self-taught authority on prison law, and a prison activist devoted to the idea that reform of the American correctional system is both a moral and practical necessity. While in prison, Hartman married, and he and his wife conceived a child who has become the emotional center of Hartman"s life. He has also been involved in a two-decade effort to reform the California State Correctional System from within. The author is the founder of a program called 'The Honor Yard,' which has made it possible for motivated prisoners to live in a compound segregated from the general prison population and to enlist in rehabilitation programs. Innately talented as a writer, Hartman is a remarkable autodidact, and his book is unique in the annals of prison literature. About the AuthorKenneth E. Hartmanhas served over 29 continuous years in the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation on a life without the possibility of parole sentence. An award-winning writer and prison reform activist, he helped establish the Honor Program at California State Prison-Los Angeles County. He is currently leading a grassroots campaign to abolish life sentences. What Our Readers Are SayingBe the first to add a comment for a chance to win!Product Details
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