Showing posts with label prison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prison. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2018

Just Mercy - YA Adaptation - by Bryan Stevenson



If you are not aware of JUST MERCY by Bryan Stevenson, you should be, especially since he spoke locally and an adaption for young adults was released today.  JUST MERCY deals with America’s incarceration system and the racial inequities which it exhibits. This is a high interest topic for our students and many will benefit from exposure to the young adult version which closely parallels the original. 

This book deals with disturbing situations, but is truly inspirational as well and in a related note, I am continually amazed at PBS’ “Brief but Spectacular” segments.  Here is the one featuring Stevenson:


In addition, view this moving tribute from PBS to the National Memorial for Peace and Justice founded by Stevenson’s Equal Justice initiative whose mission it is to protect basic human rights for the most vulnerable.  

The young adult adaptation of JUST MERCY received starred reviews from both Booklist and Kirkus

Thursday, August 9, 2018

Dopesick by Beth Macy


DOPESICK by Beth Macy is a fascinating work of non-fiction that deals with “Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America.” Macy, an award-winning journalist and author of Factory Man, explores the opioid crisis through the lives of four families whose teenage children’s addiction resulted in devastating emotional and economic costs. As she tells it, this is a story of rehab and prison, of recovery and relapse, of “the crushing and sometime contradictory facets of an inadequate criminal justice system often working at cross-purposes against medical science.” Macy argues that the flood of painkillers pushed by rapacious pharma companies,” particularly Purdue Pharma, began in isolated and politically unimportant places. A resident of Roanoke, Virginia, she attempts to retrace the epidemic as it shape-shifted across the spine of the Appalachians, roughly paralleling Interstate 81 as it fanned out from the coalfields and crept north up the Shenandoah Valley. In addition to the collapse of work, she points to denial coupled with fear and ready stereotypes (“affliction of jobless hillbillies”) plus the lack of resources for local papers to cover the enfolding story as several reasons for why it took so long for this epidemic to be widely recognized. 

The abuse of opioids is a high interest topic for our students, both in Health classes and for Junior Theme and they will find much valuable information in Macy’s work, as well as other titles such as Sederer’s The Addiction Solution and Quinones’ Dreamland (to which Macy refers). DOPESICK is extensively researched, with more than twenty percent of the book devoted to notes. Chosen as an Amazon Best Book of August 2018, DOPESICK also received starred reviews from Booklist, Kirkus and Publishers Weekly.