Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2019 Read Harder Challenge
>
Task #20: A book written in prison
message 51:
by
Saluka
(new)
Jan 12, 2019 06:54AM

reply
|
flag



Is anyone else doing this with a kid? What have you found?


he didnt write it in prison - After being released, Hinton wrote and published a memoir The Sun Does Shine: How I Found Life and Freedom on Death Row (2018).


Is anyone reading this?

Letter from the Birmingham Jail is available online (https://www.africa.upenn.edu/Articles...), an important read, and probably the shortest literary work available for this task.
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich is fairly short at ~200 pages and I love it. The reading comprehension may be difficult for an 11-year-old, but if you read out loud, or at least along side and can answer questions, it would be doable.



It was written after his release.

The Consolation of Philosophy
Dark Night of the Soul
Hey everyone! The list of recommendations for this task is posted: https://bookriot.com/2019/01/25/priso...



The very first one on the BR recommendation list is edited by a woman and contains women's writings...

I read From the Inside: Life in a Women's Prison - By the Charity Worker Who Should Never Have Been There. It all happened in my hometown, and so is extra relevant for me, and very poignant.




I just read this. It was very good.






Thank you for this suggestion!! I have struggled finding something I genuinely felt pulled to read in this challenge, but this sounds absolutely perfect!
And - extra bonus for anyone whose library offers it - the ebook is available on Hoopla.


Most interested to learn more about the author. Especially as there are a couple of other books he has written. Are they all written without Australian government being aware?


I found the stories very human—simple but touching. Highly recommend!

It is certainly long, but it is certainly worth it. I loved the book and highly recommend it.



This is the book I plan to read. Short stories aren't usually my thing but I've heard only good things about this collection.


Another update. I have been slowly reading this book, and though I feel it's an important topic, I'm not finding it too exciting. I'll probably still finish it, though, to count for the task. There were some good suggestions from others, but I have too many other books I want to read!

He was illegally detained there because he was a journalist and the fact that he had to smuggle the toilet paper Pages he wrote on I think it counts. He is apolitical prisoner.... think of Jew in Natzi Germany, some say detention camp some say prison.

Zek: An American Prison Story is written in the style of Denisovich (following one day in the life of the main character), and is also fairly short with accessible language. There are definitely some difficult topics, so I would recommend reading it yourself first to check (again, very possible because it's short). I've always thought that it would be a great unit in a high school class to teach both books.
Zek was written recently in a Washington State prison, and I could not recommend it more highly for anyone looking to fill this challenge (also has like 9 reviews on Goodreads, so would fit that other challenge also). https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/sho...

Books mentioned in this topic
De Profundis (other topics)The Prison Letters of Nelson Mandela (other topics)
No Friend But the Mountains: Writing from Manus Prison (other topics)
Prison Writings (other topics)
Dawn (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Oscar Wilde (other topics)Nelson Mandela (other topics)
Sahm Venter (other topics)
Wahida Clark (other topics)
Joyce Carol Oates (other topics)
More...