"Mainline Mama is a necessary memoir that is as tough as it is tender and as raw as it is refined. Keeonna Harris has written an abolitionist classic." -- Myriam Gurba, author of Creep: Accusations and Confessions "Mainline Mama is love letter to the women whose lives collide with our country's sprawling prison system. Keeonna Harris's memoir about her years raising a child with an incarcerated partner shows how a well-seasoned spaghetti noodle can taste of devotion, and a state-approved kiss can be an act of resistance. She and the other "mainline mamas" care not only for the men inside, but for each other. Harris shows how that care sustains her on her long journey through the carceral system, and finally, how it helps her find her way home." -- Lisa Riordan Seville, reporter, filmmaker and senior producer on the film team at Pro Publica In Mainline Mama Keeonna Harris tells a frank, revealing and sometimes heartbreaking story of love in its many forms. Harris' growth from a very young mother navigating a hostile prison system that holds her kids' father, to a woman with the confidence to live life on her own terms, inspires.
Mainline Mama offers a poignant portrayal of the power of family, against all odds, even as Harris evokes a difficult and beautiful discovery of who she is and what she wants. Keeonna Harris shares an unforgettable story of how love binds and shapes who we become, no matter the circumstances. -- Piper Kerman, Author of Orange is the New Black "Mainline Mama is the rare book written to shake a system off its bloody hinges and as importantly, the writing here makes a home of the faithful space between head and heart, between yearning and wishing. Just an absolutely awesome and vigorous work of art. Keeonna Harris is a writer's writer, do you hear me." -- Kiese Laymon, Author of Heavy: An American Memoir "This is a tender, smart and thoughtful book. Its pages are filled with beauty and disappointment and the hard won victories of a force of nature who grew up in the shadow of the prison." -- Reuben Jonathan Miller, MacArthur fellow and author of Halfway Home This affecting dispatch from inside the carceral state is not to be missed.
-- Publishers Weekly (starred review) "A story of resilience, family, and humanity in the face of oppression, Mainline Mama is a unique look at the far-reaching impacts of the prison system in America. Teens will relate to Harris' story of coming of age as a young Black woman in L.A." -- Booklist.