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Secrets from a Prison Cell : A Convict's Eyewitness Accounts of the Dehumanizing Drama of Life Behind Bars
Secrets from a Prison Cell : A Convict's Eyewitness Accounts of the Dehumanizing Drama of Life Behind Bars
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Author(s): Vick, Tony
Vick, Tony D.
ISBN No.: 9781498294355
Pages: 122
Year: 201802
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 46.20
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"The power of Secrets from a Prison Cell is that it unflinchingly looks the reader directly in the eye, makes no claim of innocence or excuses for crime, and demonstrates that accountability and forgiveness are mutually enforcing, not in contradiction as our current failed system would have us believe. After reading this book, it will be all of us--citizens, leaders, teachers, clergy, lawmakers--who are left naked and morally compromised if we fail to act to transform a soul-crushing system of retribution into a process and means of restoration. Tony Vick has given us the gift of discomfort. May we use it well." --Jeannie Alexander, Director, No Exceptions Prison Collective "Prisons reveal the secreted nature of the regime that creates them. Two millennia ago John of Patmos pulled back the veil and exposed Rome's monstrous essence. Seven decades ago, Elie Wiesel's revelations of the concentration camps unmasked the sadistic bloodlust of the Nazi's reign. In this tradition Tony Vick's exposé of the prison-industrial complex divulges the concealed character of the American Empire.


Like John's and Elie's revelations, Tony's call is neither for despair nor pity. No, here is a summons to action. Read this book and you must join the Resistance." --Richard C. Goode, Lipscomb University "2.2 million people are in U.S. prisons and jails, with millions more on probation and parole, but such statistics about our ever-expanding carceral society tend to prove powerless at touching hearts or even minds.


Tony Vick's stories and poems have the creative power of word and image to make the prisoner's life-task of correction and rehabilitation a contribution to the urgently needed conversation among and within ourselves about who we are and what we might become as twenty-first-century Americans." --Bruce T. Morrill, Professor, Vanderbilt Divinity School.


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