|
[
sing sing book club ]
"Escape
Into Reading Takes A Literal Turn"
from
USA Today, February 12, 2004
By
Bob Minzesheimer
Call it the Sing Sing Book Club.
Newjack, Ted Conover's tale of like as a rookie prison
guard, was required reading for a group of prisoners planning to
escape Sing Sing.
Last week, New York police arrested seven people, including two
inmates and a guard, at Sing Sing state prison and accused them
of planning an elaborate escape. What makes this a literary story
is that prosecutors say the plot involved assigned reading: Newjack,
Ted Conover's acclaimed book about life as a correctional officer
at Sing Sing.
In 29 years as a prosecutor, Westchester County District Attorney
Jeanine Pirro says, "I don't remember any other defendants
who read books, much less had required reading."
She assumes that the suspects, whose plot involved impersonating
prison guards, wanted to "know as much about the institution
as they could."
Newjack (prison slang for a rookie guard) was published
in 2000 and won the National Book Critics Circle award.
Conover, a journalist who has written three previous books, worked
at Sing Sing for eight months without saying he was writing a book.
He says officials never asked about his background. His account
is mostly sympathetic to guards but raises moral questions about
the way prisons are run and guards are trained.
He says he "spent hours trying to figure out how I would escape
if I were wearing the green uniform, instead of the gray —
maybe because occasionally I felt trapped in Sing Sing myself. I
think I came up with a pretty good plan.
"But I didn't put it in the book."
At first, Newjack was declared "contraband" at
Sing Sing. After a two-month review, officials said inmates could
buy it — it's not in the prison library — but citing
security, censored six pages by ripping them out.
Conover says, "No officer has ever complained to me that the
book poses a security risk, and I've corresponded with scores of
them." (For reactions to the book from guards, inmates and
their families, visit the author's Web site, www.tedconover.com.)
A spokeswoman for the Department of Correctional Services said no
officials at Sing Sing were available to discuss the book. Conover
says he "always welcomes new readers." ©
Top of page
|
|