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Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing af Ted Conover
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Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing (udgave 2001)

af Ted Conover (Forfatter)

MedlemmerAnmeldelserPopularitetGennemsnitlig vurderingOmtaler
6851931,672 (3.97)9
Acclaimed journalist Ted Conover sets a new standard for bold, in-depth reporting in this first-hand account of life inside the penal system at Sing Sing. When Ted Conover's request to shadow a recruit at the New York State Corrections Officer Academy was denied, he decided to apply for a job as a prison officer himself. The result is an unprecedented work of eyewitness journalism: the account of Conover's year-long passage into storied Sing Sing prison as a rookie guard, or "newjack." As he struggles to become a good officer, Conover angers inmates, dodges blows, and attempts, in the face of overwhelming odds, to balance decency with toughness. Through his insights into the harsh culture of prison, the grueling and demeaning working conditions of the officers, and the unexpected ways the job encroaches on his own family life, we begin to see how our burgeoning prison system brutalizes everyone connected with it. An intimate portrait of a world few readers have ever experienced, Newjack is a haunting journey into a dark undercurrent of American life.… (mere)
Medlem:happyfly
Titel:Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing
Forfattere:Ted Conover (Forfatter)
Info:Vintage (2001), Edition: Vintage Books Ed, 352 pages
Samlinger:Læser for øjeblikket
Vurdering:
Nøgleord:Ingen

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Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing af Ted Conover

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» Se også 9 omtaler

Engelsk (18)  Italiensk (1)  Alle sprog (19)
Viser 1-5 af 19 (næste | vis alle)
"These were the guys, the source of my pain, the source of their own pain, the source of their victims' and of their families' pain. My first few days, they had seemed like one big green-clad undifferentiated mass. Now, of course, they all had faces to me."

Conover entered my radar with his reading of the epilogue of Newjack on The Moth. I went into the book thinking that it would be like that: these bizarre, dramatic prison-life stories, chapters of gang crime and corruption and all the other nonsense that coupled those New Years' fires. And while it was peppered with scenes like this - staff abusing inmates, hearsay of guard/inmate relationships, and the mystery of that 16-inch shank (sword???) - it thrived instead in its nuance and the everyday stresses (and amusements) of Conover's term as CO.

The introduction sets up him going into the job to try and see the cracks in the foundation of the prison system, but (as cheesy as it sounds) it ends up being a complete search for the truth on every detail. Instead of making an excuse for all prison guards or a sob story for the abuse of the inmates, Newjack exposes every last dark corner of Sing Sing, every dangerous or heartfelt or darkly funny anecdote, and leaves the sentencing up to the reader.

Granted, his intentions are repeated at the end of the book, but it never sounds authoritative or as if there's only one side to every issue.

I also appreciated how honest Conover is. He talks just as much about when he was kind & skilled as when he was unfair & incompetent.
Instead of just someone looking in, he becomes a character all his own: he presents all his flaws, the instances where he humiliated himself, and how he began to struggle as a "free man" during his own term at Sing Sing. While humanizing him, his reflection that came from being outside Sing Sing while writing made him even judge his past self - he acknowledges the stress that was put on him, but never presents it as justification for the behavior of guards.

It definitely didn't rely on dramatics or violence or tragic inmate stories, but instead through little bits of events and quotes from inmates/guards with a whole spectrum of attitudes and outlooks, built something completely immersive and honest. Right, there weren't gallery fires every few chapters, but for all the seemingly mundane details about locking in hundreds of inmates, there were many small but incredibly powerful moments, both from his own musings and the lives of inmates that he glimpsed into.

tl;dr: a book has never given me such secondhand stress as this one did and I love it all the more for it ( )
  Chyvalrys | Aug 5, 2020 |
Highly detailed and mostly engaging, "Newjack" is a solid read. If you're interested in how the prison system works and what life inside looks like, read this book.

It drags at times when Conover gets too detailed in his day-to-day labours, but at its best when he describes the history of the electric chair or characters like Larson, who I could only picture as Snoop Dogg. He gives guards and inmates a fair shake. ( )
  Cail_Judy | Apr 21, 2020 |
A very interesting and thought provoking book written undercover. Conover strikes the perfect balance between objectivism and sentimentalism. It's a bit dated - it was published in 2000, although I found most parts still very much relevant today. Worthwhile for anyone concerned with the growing prison industrial complex and the impacts of that on society. ( )
  Mitchell_Bergeson_Jr | Aug 6, 2017 |
Winner National Book Critics Award for Non-Fiction.
Amazon.com Review:
Most people know it's easier to get into prison than it is to get out. But for a journalist, just getting into Sing Sing, New York's notorious maximum-security prison, isn't easy. In fact, Ted Conover was so stymied by official channels that he took the only way in--other than crime--and became a New York State corrections officer: "I wanted to hear the voices one truly never hears, the voices of guards--those on the front lines of our prison policies, the society's proxies." Newjack is Conover's account of nearly a year at ground zero of the criminal justice system. What it reveals is a mix of the obvious and the absurd, with hypocrisies not unexpected considering that the land of the free shares with Russia the distinction of having the world's largest prison population. As of December 1999, it was projected that the number of people incarcerated in the United States would reach 2 million in 2000.
This is the world Conover enters when he, along with other new recruits, undergoes seven weeks of pseudomilitary preparation at the Albany Training Academy. Then it's off to Sing Sing for the daily grind of prison life. Conover correctly and vividly captures the essence of that life, its tedium interspersed with the adrenaline rush of an "incident" and the edge of fear that accompanies every action. He also details how the guards experience their own feelings of confinement, often at the hands of the inmates:

A consequence of putting men in cells and controlling their movements is that they can do almost nothing for themselves. For their various needs they are dependent on one person, their gallery officer. Instead of feeling like a big, tough guard, the gallery officer at the end of the day often feels like a waiter serving a hundred tables or like the mother of a nightmarishly large brood of sullen, dangerous, and demanding children. When grown men are infantilized, most don't take to it too nicely.

And not taking to it nicely often involves violence. Indeed, the constant potential for violence on any scale makes even humdrum assignments dangerous. It's astonishing that more doesn't happen, given that the majority of the 1,800 inmates have been convicted of violent felonies: murder, manslaughter, rape, robbery, assault, kidnapping, burglary, arson. But beneath the simmering rage rests an unexpected sensitivity that Conover captures brilliantly. After encountering a Hispanic inmate with a tattoo of a heartbreaking passage from The Diary of Anne Frank on his back, he writes: "It was easier to stay incurious as an officer. Under the inmates' surface bluster, their cruelty and selfishness, was almost always something ineffably sad." Ultimately, the emphasis of Conover's work is on the toll prison exacts--most immediately on the jailed and their jailers, but also on a society that puts both there in increasing numbers. --Gwen Bloomsburg ( )
Flere brugere har rapporteret denne anmeldelse som misbrug af betingelserne for brug. Det er derfor fjernet (vis).
  WayCriminalJustice | Apr 5, 2016 |
Pretty cool to see how far Ted Conover will go to get a story. Since the prison system wouldn't let him in as a journalist to write this book, he actually became a correction's officer at the famous New York prison, Sing Sing. Good read for anyone interested in the prison system. ( )
  biggs1399 | Jan 19, 2016 |
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Acclaimed journalist Ted Conover sets a new standard for bold, in-depth reporting in this first-hand account of life inside the penal system at Sing Sing. When Ted Conover's request to shadow a recruit at the New York State Corrections Officer Academy was denied, he decided to apply for a job as a prison officer himself. The result is an unprecedented work of eyewitness journalism: the account of Conover's year-long passage into storied Sing Sing prison as a rookie guard, or "newjack." As he struggles to become a good officer, Conover angers inmates, dodges blows, and attempts, in the face of overwhelming odds, to balance decency with toughness. Through his insights into the harsh culture of prison, the grueling and demeaning working conditions of the officers, and the unexpected ways the job encroaches on his own family life, we begin to see how our burgeoning prison system brutalizes everyone connected with it. An intimate portrait of a world few readers have ever experienced, Newjack is a haunting journey into a dark undercurrent of American life.

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