Shakespeare saved my life Ten years in solitary with the Bard
Book - 2013
Just as Larry Newton, one of the most notorious inmates at Indiana Federal Prison, was trying to break out of jail, Dr. Laura Bates was trying to break in. Now, a decade later, her Shakespeare in Shackles program has been lauded by academics and prison communities alike. In this profound illustration of the enduring lessons of Shakespeare through the ten-year relationship of Bates and Newton, an amazing testament to the power of literature emerges. But it's not just the prisoners who are transformed. It is a starkly engaging tale, one that will be embraced by anyone who has ever been changed by a book.
- Subjects
- Published
-
Naperville, Ill. :
Sourcebooks
2013.
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Item Description
- "A memoir"--Cover.
- Physical Description
- x, 291 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
- ISBN
- 9781402273148
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review
CHAPTER 1 Favorite Freakin' Shakespeare Oh, man, this is my favorite freakin' quote!" What professor wouldn't like to hear a student enthuse so much over a Shakespeare play--a Shakespeare history play, no less! And then to be able to flip open the two-thousand-page Complete Works of Shakespeare and find the quote immediately: "When that this body did contain a spirit, a kingdom for it was too small a bound"! He smacks the book as he finishes reading. Meanwhile, I'm still scrambling to find the quote somewhere in Henry the Fourth, Part One. "Act uh...?" "Act 5, scene 4," my student informs me, again smacking the page with his enthusiastic fist. "Oh, man, that is crazy!" Yes, this is crazy: I am sitting side-by-side with a prisoner who has just recently been allowed to join the general prison population after more than ten years in solitary confinement. We met three years prior, in 2003, when I created the first-ever Shakespeare program in a solitary confinement unit, and we spent three years working together in that unit. Now we have received unprecedented permission to work together, alone, unsupervised, to create a series of Shakespeare workbooks for prisoners. Newton is gesticulating so animatedly that it draws the attention of an officer walking by our little classroom. He pops his head inside. "Everything okay in here?" he asks. "Just reading Shakespeare," I reply. He shakes his head and walks on. "That is crazy!" Newton repeats, his head still in the book. A record ten and a half consecutive years in solitary confinement, and he's not crazy, he's not dangerous--he's reading Shakespeare. And maybe, just maybe, it is because he's reading Shakespeare that he is not crazy, or dangerous.