A genuinely gut wrenching account of the horrific torture and abuse that American prisoners are subjected to on a daily basis, not to mention the fickle nature of the American “justice” system that addresses social ills with ever expanding punitive incarceration. As someone who reads a lot of disturbing content about wars, genocides, torture, human rights abuses of every variety; this was without a doubt the most unsettling book I’ve read in recent memory.
The collection of stories that Pendergrass and Hoke have painstakingly curated leaves the reader with no doubt that solitary confinement unequivocally constitutes torture; and for any callous readers who remain unpersuaded by such anecdotal evidence, they also cite numerous academic psychological sources throughout the footnotes and appendixes to verify this claim.
As one lawyer writes: “You may think my clients are prisoners of war held in some terrible foreign hellhole, or perhaps captives of fanatical terrorist cells. But all of them are in solitary confinement in US prisons, jails, and juvenile detention centers. In the United States, almost nobody survives solitary confinement undamaged, and many don’t survive at all.”
A timely and relevant read given the current conversation around granting suffrage to the incarcerated population of the US. This book sheds a humanizing light on a villainized demographic, and should be required reading for anyone who continues to subscribe to the misinformed notion that mass incarceration keeps “us” safe from “them”.