Synopses & Reviews
First published to mark the fifty-year anniversary of the Supreme Court decision
Gideon v. Wainwright, which guaranteed the right to legal counsel for all criminal defendants,
Chasing Gideon is “a hugely important book” (
New York Law Journal) that gives us a visceral, unforgettable experience of our systemic failure to fulfill this basic constitutional right. Written in the tradition of
Gideons Trumpet, by the late Anthony Lewis, this is “a book of nightmares,” as Leonard Pitts wrote in the
Miami Herald, because it shows that the “‘justice system too often produces the opposite of what its name suggests, particularly for its most vulnerable constituents.”
Following its publication, Chasing Gideon, which ACLU director Anthony Romero said “illustrates the scope and seriousness of the indigent defense crisis,” became an integral part of a growing national conversation about how to reform indigent defense in America, coordinated with an HBO documentary and a website to promote the book and the movie. The effort spread news about Chasing Gideon directly to public defenders offices nationwide and drove a national conversation about what Eric Holder called the “shameful state of affairs” of indigent defense (in the Washington Post).
Review
"Chasing Gideon is a wonderful book, its human stories gripping, its insight into how our law is made profound."
—Anthony Lewis, author of Gideon's Trumpet
"Houpperts narratives of crimes, investigations, and court proceedings are careful and engrossing, and she has an excellent command of the relevant data, which she intersperses among interviews and case histories to great effect."
—Los Angeles Review of Books
"Highly recommended. Fluent and fluid, Houpperts book has all the urgency this subject demands and is a page-turner. Alternately thrilling and gut-riling, this book will grab and hold lovers of great nonfiction."
—Library Journal
"A well-researched and -written investigation that shows the inadequacies in stark human terms rather than an abstraction."
—Kirkus Reviews
Synopsis
Praised by Anthony Lewis, author of the classic Gideons Trumpet, as "inspired," Chasing Gideon was originally published to mark the 50th anniversary of the Gideon v. Wainwright Supreme Court decision that guaranteed the right to legal representation for all Americans. The book uses the human stories of defendants around the country—in Washington State, in New Orleans, in Georgia, and in Florida—to give us a visceral, unforgettable experience of our failure to provide adequate legal representation for poor people in America.
About the Author
Karen Houppert has written for the Washington Post Magazine, The Nation, Newsday, the New York Times, Mother Jones, the Village Voice, Salon, and many other publications. She is the author of Home Fires Burning: Married to the Military—For Better or Worse and The Cure: Confronting the Last Unmentionable Taboo—Menstruation. She lives in Baltimore, Maryland, where she teaches at Johns Hopkins University and at Morgan State University.