Books about Penitentiary from Amazon.com



Al Capone Does My Shirts (Newbery Honor Book)
Moose Flannagan moves with his family to Alcatraz so his dad can work as a prison guard and his sister, Natalie, can attend a special school. But Natalie has autism, and when sheÂ’s denied admittance to the school, the stark setting of Alcatraz begins to unravel the tenuous coping mechanisms MooseÂ’s family has used for dealing with her disorder.

When Moose meets Piper, the cute daughter of the Warden, he knows right off sheÂ’s trouble. But sheÂ’s also strangely irresistible. All Moose wants to do is protect Natalie, live up to his parentsÂ’ expectations, and stay out of trouble. But on Alcatraz, trouble is never very far away.

Set in 1935, when guards actually lived on Alcatraz Island with their families, Choldenko’s second novel brings humor to the complexities of family dynamics and illuminates the real struggle of a kid trying to free himself from the “good boy” stance he’s taken his whole life..
Price: $4.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]



The Hate Factory: A First-Hand Account of the 1980 Riot at the Penitentiary of New Mexico
The terror lasted for thirty-six hours. When it was over, thirty-three inmates were dead, all at the hands of their fellow convicts It was an outbreak of inmate violence unequaled in the annals of prison uprisings

It happened at the Penitentiary of New Mexico—Time magazine called it “the nation’s most notorious prison.”

W.G. Stone was there. He witnessed the beatings, the stabbings, the rape, the torture.

“Tying the rope under his arms and around his chest, they strung him up on the basketball hoop for all to see. There he would hang for the rest of the riot…During those hours of madness that were to follow, inmates would come in and hack at his dangling corpse with knives, beat it with pipes, mutilating it so totally that it was beyond recognition, a raw, bloody mass of flesh, by the time the uprising was over.”

The Hate FactoryÂ…

.
Price: $9.62 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Devil's Butcher Shop: The New Mexico Prison Uprising
“A modern horror story told in graphic detail. Morris’s meticulous documentation traces prison corruption . . . proving the tragedy could have been avoided I recommend this book without reservation.”—Jack Anderson.
Price: $12.07 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Breaking the Rock: The Great Escape from Alcatraz
Taut, suspenseful account of June 1962 Alcatraz "escape of the century" when three men disappeared

Showing security lapses, staff morale, moderizations, building deteriorations and risky behavoir which led to the closing of the Rock..
Price: $8.74 [Notify me when price goes down.]



Manual of Indulgences
Latest edition of the Enchiridion Indulgentiarum (Handbook of Indulgences) issued by the Vatican Replaces all other handbooks and manuals ..this is THE official manual..
Price: $12.69 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Bird Man: The Many Faces of Robert Stroud
The realy vs. Hollywood story and psychological profile of a pyschopathic killer and bird breeder .
Price: $5.60 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Affinity
Affinity is a tale of power and possession that Henry James himself might admire. In her first novel, Tipping the Velvet, Sarah Waters explored secrets and longing--capping off this lesbian romp with a utopian-socialist vision. Her intricate follow-up is just as sensual but infinitely darker, its moral more difficult to descry. Its stylistic and psychological rewards, however, are visible at every turn, the author's persuasive imagination matched by her gift for storytelling.

In late September 1874, Margaret Prior makes her way through the pentagons of London's Millbank Prison, a place of fearful symmetry and endless corridors. This plain woman on the verge of 30 has come to comfort those behind bars, several of whom Waters brings to instant, sad life. And our Lady Visitor plans to take her role dead seriously, having recovered from two years of nervous indolence in her family's Chelsea house. One person, however, makes her job a passion. Opening an inspection slit (or "eye" as these devices are known), Margaret hears "a perfect sigh, like a sigh in a story." Peering inward, she's confronted by the most erotic of visions--a woman turned toward the sun, caressing her cheek with a forbidden violet: "As I watched, she put the flower to her lips, and breathed upon it, and the purple of the petals gave a quiver and seemed to glow..."

Selina Dawes may indeed have the face of a Crivelli angel, but this medium is in for fraud and assault, her last session having gone very badly indeed. Suffice it to say that the first full encounter between these two very different women is enthralling. "You think spiritualism a kind of fancy," Selina riddles. "Doesn't it seem to you, now you are here, that anything might be real, since Millbank is?" And soon enough Margaret receives several viable signs of the supernatural: a locket disappears from her room, flowers mysteriously appear, and her dazzling friend knows everything about her. Strangest of all, Selina seems to love her.

As Margaret records her weekly prison forays, her own past comes into focus, notably her plans to travel to Italy with her first love (who is now her sister-in-law). But her current journal, she convinces herself, is to be very different from her last one, which "took as long to burn as human hearts, they say, do take." Meanwhile, Waters offers a narrative two-for-one, placing Margaret's diary cheek by jowl with Selina's chronicle of her pre-Millbank existence. This dispassionate, staccato record initially suggests that we can separate truth from desire. Or can we? What Waters's haunting creation leaves us with is a more painful reality--that knowledge and belief are entirely different things. --Kerry Fried.
Price: $18.75 [Notify me when price goes down.]



<< oz amos



All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Copyright 1996-2007 CHHS, your place for CHHS, Plano, Texas, 10220