Life after death

English language

Published Nov. 30, 2012 by Blue Rider Press.

ISBN:
978-0-399-16020-2
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (5 reviews)

1 edition

Review of 'Life after death' on 'Storygraph'

2 stars

I won't lie, I skimmed a good deal of the second half of the book. I found the author's discussion of his childhood and his experiences during his pre-prison life interesting but once that part was over, there was just too much rambling on about baseball and other things that didn't feel relevant.

I'd go 2.5 if Goodreads had a half-star option.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review. Yes, this has been in my pile for a few years.

Review of 'Life after death' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

“I regularly receive letters now from people who had not even been born the last time I saw a sunset.”

Reading this book is akin to reading tomes from survivors of the concentration camps during the Second World War. Echols was abused by the law (both in jail and out of it) and by other adults, tortured, his eyesight was ruined for life due to spending years in solitary confinement, not to mention the fact that he was wrongfully imprisoned and his seemingly demented parents' upbringing. Despite this, he has written a quite beautiful book with loads of disgusting, fulfilling bits, e.g.:

In the movies it’s always the other prisoners you have to watch out for. In real life, it’s the guards and the administration. They go out of their way to make your life harder and more stressful than it already is, as if being on Death Row were …

Review of 'Life after death' on 'LibraryThing'

4 stars

“I regularly receive letters now from people who had not even been born the last time I saw a sunset.”

Reading this book is akin to reading tomes from survivors of the concentration camps during the Second World War. Echols was abused by the law (both in jail and out of it) and by other adults, tortured, his eyesight was ruined for life due to spending years in solitary confinement, not to mention the fact that he was wrongfully imprisoned and his seemingly demented parents' upbringing. Despite this, he has written a quite beautiful book with loads of disgusting, fulfilling bits, e.g.:

In the movies it’s always the other prisoners you have to watch out for. In real life, it’s the guards and the administration. They go out of their way to make your life harder and more stressful than it already is, as if being on Death Row were …
avatar for kara4d2

rated it

3 stars

Subjects

  • Prisoners
  • Death row inmates
  • Biography
  • False imprisonment

Places

  • United States