In 1995 Jonathan Aitken was Chief Secretary to the Treasury, wealthy, married and tipped as a future leader of the Conservative party. Yet a mere four years later he was imprisoned, bankrupt, divorced and disgraced. This book is therefore about the rise and fall of a remarkable life.
Porridge and Passion is the sequel to Pride and Perjury, Aitken's earlier volume of memoirs. The narrative begins in his house on the morning he was due to be sentenced for committing perjury under oath in an earlier libel action. It then follows the author's temporary incarceration in notorious Belmarsh gaol and onto HMP Standford Hill where he spent the remainder of his 7 months imprisonment. Upon release, Aitken studied for two years at Wycliffe Hall, Oxford taking a degree in Theology. After graduating he devoted himself to writing and speaking mainly on Christian subjects and also happily remarried.
There have been people who were imprisoned longer, lost more money or more harshly vilified but surely very few whose downfall was so comprehensive and so all encompassing as Aitkens. For this reason Porridge and Passion is a fascinating close up study of a man stripped of everything and his efforts to rebuild his life. I am cautious, even suspicious, of anything I read in print but I couldn't help but be moved by his expressions of remorse, his lack of self-justification and his forgiveness towards his detractors.
The reader is also given an interesting and oftentimes humorous insight into the prison system. But this book is essentially a real life look at the human condition at its best and worse. Porridge and Passion is a must read for its inspiration.