I vaguely remember hearing about Raphael Rowe's release from prison after spending 12 years behind bars for a crime he did not commit, but did not recall his name. I then stumbled upon Inside the World's Toughest Prisons about 6 months ago on Netflix and binge watched the entire series. I found it extremely interesting and it piqued my interest to learn more about his story.
When I found out Mr. Rowe had released a book a couple of years ago, I set about trying to locate a copy. Once I finally did, it sat on my To Be Read list for a couple of months before I finally got around to cracking it open.
Above all else, what he went through, the miscarriage of justice, and the time he lost behind bars from family and friends is absolutely terrible and nobody should have to endure that… ever! The book was pretty thorough, very detailed in his research and struggles to finally get justice, and very interesting. But, I found parts of it a little dry. The first couple of chapters and the last couple of chapters were good, the middle ones, in my opinion, no so much. I found it a little difficult to keep some things straight with the back and forth with the lawyers, guards, other inmates, prisons, etc.
Now, this is just my opinion, (and it stems from having read more than a few biographies where you get the feeling that memories and situations are sometimes being embellished and only positive angles are being told), but I find it hard to believe that Mr. Rowe somehow always came out on top when he got into any skirmishes with other prisoners while behind bars. He took on big bullies and lived to tell the tales. He thought he could have easily overpowered all the guards that were transporting him from one prison to another and escaped if he really wanted to. That type of fluff just detracts from his story, and what he went through. Again, my opinion only.
Not an overly long book. Has more than a few spelling and grammar errors, but over all I am glad I read it. Hoping he is looking into filming more episodes of Inside the World's Toughest Prisons, but not holding my breath.