This book came to my attention through my work-place friendship with Tim New who served as Assistant Warden to Jim Willett during Willett's service as warden of The Walls Unit of the Texas Prision System in Huntsville, Texas. This book follows Willett's career from the time he first walked into the Walls Unit as a college student needing a temporary job to see him through graduation until he retired thirty years later with the dubious distinction of having presided over 89 executions.
Jim Willett writes a very engaging memoir. He covers the facts of his employment with TDCJ in an easy-going, straight-forward manner. With the help of co-arthur Ron Rozelle, Willett leaves the reader with the feeling of a man who did his duty, neither shirking the sensational aspects of his job nor revelling in the final moments of death row inmates who reached the end of a life-long spiral downward. His account of the last hours of life of a few of the 89 men he accompanied to the death chamber are very interesting, but I found his observations of the evolution of the Texas prison system over his thirty years there to be what interested me most.
Jim Willett's years with TDCJ saw him, as a young guard, trying to get a better view from a cooling tower exhaust portal of the dramatic and bloody ending of the Carasco hostage-taking incident in the seventies. He also presided over the execution of Gary Graham who had become the cause de jour of many Hollywood celeberties in the ninties. He did his job with compassion and good humor and I was impressed with his response to a question he apparently got often about his views on the death penalty and his part in the system that administered final justice.
I highly recommend this book regardless of your reason for reading it. I purchased the book from Amazon.com but it can also be purchased from the Texas Prison Museum in Huntsville. I am extremely pleased to now have a copy of the book signed by Jim Willett who, in his retirement, oversees the museum.