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The Warehouse: A Visual Primer on Mass Incarceration

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Mass incarceration is a lived, sensory experience. The most eye-popping statistics alone cannot relate the enormity of its psychological and societal impacts. This concise, illustrated primer is a collaboration between one of mass incarceration's sharpest opponents, James Kilgore, and information artist Vic Liu. It brings to life the histories and means of daily survival of the marginalized people ensnared in this racist, ableist system of class-based oppression. The book elegantly weaves together the most insightful activist scholarship with vivid testimonials by incarcerated people as they fight back against oppression and imagine freedom. Those targeted for incarceration do not simply submit to a monochromatic existence behind bars. The Warehouse showcases the abolition futures being crafted from the inside as people resist through direct action and artistic expression. This book is designed to inform, enrage, and ultimately inspire the same radical hope propelling incarcerated underminers of the carceral state.

Kindle Edition

Published August 15, 2024

6 people are currently reading
170 people want to read

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James Kilgore

11 books23 followers

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5 stars
35 (62%)
4 stars
13 (23%)
3 stars
7 (12%)
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1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Andrew Eder.
785 reviews23 followers
September 15, 2024
Part art, part text book, part instructional guide, I LOVED the way this was laid out and all of the information given. Data heavy with stories intertwined. Really great balance!!

Highly recommend.
Profile Image for Sophie.
220 reviews8 followers
October 16, 2024
read for work! a really great, short, engaging primer on mass incarceration, reentry, and prison reform/abolition movements and philosophies.
Profile Image for amanda.
176 reviews10 followers
February 22, 2025
an absolute fantastic intro to anyone interested in learning some basics on mass incarceration and prison abolition. highly, highly recommend!
Profile Image for Hugo Salas.
79 reviews1 follower
March 9, 2025
I really liked it, but it would have been many times more useful if I had read it 3 years ago.

This is a great introduction to the criminal justice system in the US. It covers a lot of relevant topics from sentencing, living conditions and reform movements. I wish everyone working in the space could start by reading this.
Profile Image for Joe Myers.
5 reviews
July 15, 2024
An accessible and heartbreaking dive into mass incarceration in the US. Books like this are incredibly important. I recommend it for any person and any of their non-abolitionist friends. This book should build empathy for those who are, have been, or are connected to someone incarcerated.
Profile Image for Tatiana.
54 reviews
July 29, 2024
Must read! A quick easy read jam packed with info AND some solutions. I learned a lot and I would definitely recommend to everyone.
Profile Image for David.
1,240 reviews35 followers
August 4, 2024
This is one of the best, and most visually appealing books I’ve read from PM press. Definitely deserves wide distribution! Very informative!
35 reviews17 followers
August 2, 2024
The graphs and images are informative and at times shocking at the conditions present inside. The book gives a great overview on the systemic history and policy changes that got us to this point. The authors also give a great overview on some recent strategies and tactics by community members looking to help change the system from one of profit and greed to one that actually treats people with diginity and opportunities to grow. The underlying question of the economics of prisons is not talked about enough and the fact that social services and reform programs cost a fraction of what it costs to prison people in the current way the US does is quite eye opening. Enjoyed the intersectional lens and layers of complexity of being a human and then being an incarcerated human is well described and consdiered. Highly reccommend.
141 reviews
July 10, 2024
Eh. Anecdotes about incarceration are ok but when it ventures into social science there are lots of oversimplified and misleading claims. Eg:
- 1 in 3 adults in the US have a criminal record: this is technically true according to the FBI definition but does not match a common sense definition of what a criminal record means
- ascribes the 90s crime wave entirely to the economy being bad
- claims that prison in the 60s and 70s was focused on rehabilitation whereas in the 80s and 90s it became more punitive and harmful. This might be true in some minor ways (eg getting rid of Pell grants for prisoners which seems bad) but is way oversimplified and overall I’d way way rather be in prison now or in the 90s than in the 60s or 70s
Profile Image for Molly.
46 reviews3 followers
July 1, 2025
I loved how this book was designed. I want more nonfictions to be laid out like this: picture books for adults.

I loved the narrative sections of the book the most, I wish more facts were presented in a first hand account/narrative kind of way. The facts that were presented in this way hit home the most.

The author is not really opinionated until the very last page, which is good, but comes out of nowhere and isn’t quite supported by some earlier facts. I think certain connections are a bit of a reach, but I can see where they sprouted from.

Overall, really informative read. I learned so so so much.
385 reviews1 follower
July 22, 2025
I picked this up after Chain Gang All Stars, hoping for more information. It did not disappoint. It is very clearly and engagingly written with many graphics to allow easy absorption of information. There are many quotes from inmates as well as reformers and abolitionists. There are examples of art that has been created inside. I think it should be an automatic accompaniment to CGAS.
Profile Image for Kat.
62 reviews
September 12, 2024
good overview of the issue, but very stats heavy in some sections. statistics on their own do not a full story make. accessible read for people new to the topic. doesn’t leave the reader with a lot that they can DO; i cannot join a think tank unfortunately. gonna pull out the camera tho, so that’s something
345 reviews
May 15, 2025
I read this as an evaluator for United Women of Faith reading program. A very detailed history of mass incarceration, prison experience and possible solutions. Written partially in the style of a graphic novel. Difficult topic.
Profile Image for Brittany.
1,099 reviews37 followers
Read
December 18, 2025
I highly recommend this to everyone, especially those who have no prior knowledge of the prison industrial complex. It is a great abolitionist primer and should infuriate the fuck out of anyone who reads it.
Profile Image for gable!! .
31 reviews1 follower
November 20, 2025
a very informative, eye opening book on how our prison system got to where it is today. prison reform now!!!!
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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