adair: (Default)
It has been a LONG time since I posted - three years, to be exact. I just got a push to post when the Chacago Tribune sent the latest on Adam Gray's story.

This is the man who was sentenced to Life in IDOC when he was 14 years old. I found him when sending books to him from Books to Prisoners. I don't often check the cases of people I send books to, but his record showed his entry date when he was barely 14. I did research and found he was sentenced for setting a fire where 2 people died. These is a lot about his court issues that was very wrong, but it took 24 years before he got good legal representation that made all the fire setting issues recognized as not correct and he was released immediately. He had family to go to, and legal representation. I hoped he would just blend into life. He did, but he also was suing IDOC and various police in Federal court. This took a long time to work through the legal system, but on May 25 it was finally settled. Here is the settlement as reported in the Chicago Tribune.

The last statement from his lawyer says it all.
“Adam’s done,” he said. “He’s not stepping foot in another courthouse. He’s done with the judicial system.”




Federal jury awards record $27 million to man arrested in fatal fire by Chicago police at age 14
By Jason Meisner
Chicago Tribune

May 25, 2023 at 3:22 pm




Expand

Adam Gray with his attorney, Jon Loevy, after winning a record-setting wrongful conviction settlement on May 25, 2023. Gray was wrongfully convicted in a double-fatal arson at the age of 14 and imprisoned for 24 years. (E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune)

Federal jury awards record $27 million to man arrested in fatal fire by Chicago police at age 14
By Jason Meisner
Chicago Tribune

May 25, 2023 at 3:22 pm






Adam Gray with his attorney, Jon Loevy, after winning a record-setting wrongful conviction settlement on May 25, 2023. Gray was wrongfully convicted in a double-fatal arson at the age of 14 and imprisoned for 24 years. (E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune)

In what may be a local record for a wrongful conviction case, a federal jury Thursday awarded $27 million to a man who spent more than two decades in prison after being wrongfully convicted in a double-fatal arson as a teenager, finding that Chicago police coerced his confession, fabricated evidence and violated his civil rights.
As the verdict was announced in U.S. District Judge Edmond Chang’s courtroom, the plaintiff, Adam Gray, bowed his head and leaned into his attorney, Jon Loevy, who hugged his shoulders.


Afterward, Loevy told reporters that Gray’s life has been “damaged immeasurably” by the ordeal, but that he’s trying to get his life back on track.
“Adam was arrested before breakfast, they had the case closed before noon, and were home early for dinner,” Loevy said in the lobby of the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse. “It took 24 years for the system to sort it out.”



Gray made a short statement, saying, “These dirty cops need to be stopped.”
“It’s out of control,” he said. “Break down that blue wall of silence.”


Gray then left the courthouse while the news conference was still going and walked to the nearby hotel where he’s staying.
The $27 million in compensatory damages awarded by the jury appears to be the highest award ever given to a single plaintiff in a wrongful conviction case here, edging out the $25.2 million handed to Eddie Bolden in 2021 for his wrongful murder conviction.
The jury, which deliberated for parts of three days before reaching a verdict, did find in favor of the one surviving police detective named in the lawsuit, Daniel McInerney, awarding no punitive damages.
A spokesperson for the city’s Law Department had no immediate comment.

In addition to being on the hook for the compensatory damages, the city has also paid millions of dollars to outside lawyers to defend itself in the case, which Loevy called a questionable move that city officials should have to answer for.
“This is a case that should have been resolved,” he said. “This is a case that Adam was reasonably trying to resolve for a long time. The city of Chicago instead decided to pay outside counsel millions and millions of dollars in legal fees to try and say they didn’t do anything wrong. ... It’s becoming frustrating.”

Loevy would not describe in detail what kind of settlement offers were made, but he said, “All of Adam’s demands were surpassed by what the jury just did,” and that the city’s offers “now look kind of silly in comparison.”
Gray, who was arrested at just 14 and had been sentenced to mandatory life without parole, was released from prison in May 2017 after Cook County prosecutors decided that advances in fire science raised too many questions about his conviction on charges of setting a fire in 1993 that killed two people on Chicago’s Southwest Side.
His 54-page lawsuit, filed five years ago, named the city of Chicago as well as a host of former Chicago police detectives, a youth officer, a retired Cook County assistant state’s attorney and a former fire marshal.
The lawsuit alleged that detectives “concocted and coerced” a false confession from Gray after hours of illegal interrogation while refusing to allow him to see his mother and brother, who were at the station trying to talk to him. Instead, detectives told Gray that his mother had told them “she did not care about him and refused to come to the police station altogether,” the suit alleged.
Police and prosecutors had alleged that at the time of the fire, Gray was angry with a girl who lived in a two-flat in the 4100 block of South Albany Avenue because she had rejected him. Investigators alleged that the eighth grader ignited an accelerant that he poured on the enclosed back porch on the second floor and the stairs. While the girl and her parents escaped, the second-floor tenants, Peter McGuiness, 54, and his sister, Margaret Mesa, 74, died.
At Gray’s trial, prosecutors focused on evidence that the fire had been intentionally set and the confession from Gray. Two fire investigators said they found alligator charring and deep burn patterns at the scene and concluded they were evidence of a hot fire set with an accelerant. A milk jug found in the alley behind the home contained what police believed was an accelerant. A gas station clerk said Gray bought gas shortly before the fire.

In a statement to police, Gray admitted buying gasoline to set the fire, but he later denied the admissions, saying he’d confessed only because of pressure from the officers questioning him. Gray’s attorney said he had been questioned for seven hours and couldn’t endure any more.
The lawsuit alleged that police at some point in the interrogation had “obtained” an empty milk jug and concocted the story about Gray filling it with gas. Tests revealed there was no gasoline or gas residue in or on the jug, the lawsuit stated.
At one point, one of the interrogating detectives allegedly told Gray that a copy machine “could determine if he had lead from gasoline on his hands,” court records in the case show. The detective made a copy of the teen’s hands and told him “the machine showed lead.”
The same detective also allegedly told Gray he believed he might be innocent, but “the only way you’ll get out of here is if you say you did it,” court records show. Later, the detective allegedly offered to drop Gray off at school if he confessed, but if he didn’t confess, “he would be given the electric chair.”
Gray’s path to having the charges against him dismissed was a long one. While advances in fire science date to the early 1990s, around the time Gray was convicted, it took investigators years to embrace those changes. Instead, they continued to investigate fires using methods they learned from veteran colleagues or gathered from their own experience, even though the practices weren’t rooted in science.
Today, the new rules are widely accepted by fire investigators, resulting in prosecutors and defense attorneys around the country reopening old cases to determine whether the fires at the center of them were, in fact, arsons. Many convictions have been set aside.

In Gray’s case, Loevy said, the bad science was just one of myriad problems with the investigation.
“It was an all-star team of wrongful conviction,” Loevy said. “You had a false confession, you had junk science, and you had faulty eyewitness testimony, all coming together for Adam Gray.”
Gray, meanwhile, has tried to rebuild his life since his release from prison. Loevy said he’s now married and lives a quiet life in the woods. “But they took a lot from him,” he said.
Minutes later, realizing that Gray had left the courthouse, Loevy looked around and laughed.
“Adam’s done,” he said. “He’s not stepping foot in another courthouse. He’s done with the judicial system.”
adair: (Default)
Here I am, at home by our governor's decree. B is working on his trains; I am cleaning places that have not been touched in a while. An astonishing amount of dust accumulates in edges and corners, furniture with too much trim, baseboards with too much layering, walls behind furniture - dust everywhere. Some of it is gone, but there is plenty that is too high for me to reach.

My reading has mostly been re-reads, post cataract surgery and up to now. I read all of Lawrence Block's Bernie Rhodenbarr series and recently finished re-reading the Keller series. I have no idea what makes me read books about cheerful, skilled criminals, but Block makes them amusing people you would not mind knowing as long as they did not practice their skills on you.

Possible )
adair: stack of books (books)
What I Finished
I just finished Finity's End and before that Rimrunners and Tripoint. They are towards the end of the Company Wars, and Alliance Rising is the beginning. I am thinking through the Company Wars history as presented so far; I probably need to write it down. Cherryh has promised to put a history of the early parts up on Closed Circle; her ebook site, but so far that has not happened.

Rimrunners and Finity's End are both from an Alliance point of view, and Tripoint involves a ship providing supplies for the Mazianni, the old Earth Fleet. I can't resist trying to figure out what might have happened to people from the other Company Wars books - some of them are on ships that cross the Union-Alliance line and others support one side or another. Figuring out all this is not easy to do unless I re-read all the books and make extensive notes. Even then, it sometimes comes down to guessing.

What I Will Read Next

I don't know. I have a lot of books piled around, and am in the long process of looking through all my bookcases, and making sure everything is noted on LibraryThing. I am currently working on the east wall of my living room, and several of those shelves a double-stacked with paperbacks, mostly fan stuff. I just finished the Andre Norton section. A lot of those went off the BTP; I kept some sf, and her early non-sf books, like Follow the Drum and Scarface. I may fall into reading some of the books there - Highlander, Babylon 5, Beauty and the Beast, Roar. There are also the Elizabeth Bear books I have in paperback, Ursula LeGuin in pb, Nancy Springer - I can be tempted by any of them if I let myself.
adair: books and tea (book)
What I Finished
After reading Cherryh's latest book Alliance Rising I tried to remember what happened to the Hinder Stars and their stations in books set later in the Alliance-Union timeline. I started skimming books I remembered having some mention of the early stations, and ended up reading the two I remembered - Merchanter's Luck, in which the station is Venture and I am nearly finished re-reading Rimrunners where the Hinder Starts station is Thule. Things don't look good for Alpha Station or the people whose lives are tied to it. I hear there are two more books planned to follow Alliance Rising, and Cherryh has written an Alliance/Union timeline history, which she is holding back from her ebook site Closed Circle, possibly until the other books are published. This frustrates me, because I don't care about spoilers, and I am not sure anything in the early history would be much of a surprise to her regular readers, but I have to wait. In the meantime I continue to speculate, and to re-read at least those of her A/U books that cluster around the Company Wars period.

All this re-reading will probably take up a lot of the next week or so. I still have Ramp Hollow laid out for when I am ready to take it on.
adair: yellow leaf on black background (leaf)
What I Finished

I finished Alliance Rising yesterday. It is certainly going to have a sequel - it is a a complete book, but from what Cherryh readers know of later development in the Alliance/Union books there is a lot more to come. Cherryh has writtien a history of Alliance/Union, and promised to put it in her Closed Circle after sending AR to the publisher. That time has come, but no history yet. She may be waiting for publication of the sequel. I can’t imagine any regular reader will care about spoilers, and much of the history can’t really be spoilers since we know a lot from Rimrunners, Merchanter’s Luck, Finity’s End, Tripoint just to name those that are fairly close in time to Alliance Rising.

Back to the current book - three themes stand out for me. The alliance the merchanters are trying to form is quite a lot like a labor union, both in organizational process and issues and concerns it wants to address. As Cherryh readers know it goes much beyond that fairly quickly, driven by the Company Wars, but the start is a labor union between FTL ships and space stations.

This ties into the second theme - how politics and what amounts to political parties develop in conditions of space travel and in situations where the originating group - Earth in this case - is far from its colonies and quickly loses control of them. Trade shifts also play a big part here.

There third theme I see is how groups left behind by technological and social change react to knowing they are losing their position and have little they can do to change that or to move with the times. This shows up often in the Alliance/Union books; sometimes Cherryh deals with politics at the top, but often she writes about people whose lives are altered or damaged by by social and technological change.

What I Am Reading Now

I have not started it yet, but the book lying around that I am look at is Ramp Hollow; the ordeal of Appalachia by Steven Stoll. I found this in a book review which described it as an antidote toHillbilly Elegy. Since I disagreed deeply with that book, and was disgusted at how popular it became as a description of rural working people I had to get Ramp Hollow. That appears to be a history of the development of Appalachia, the varied images it has had, and the profit-seeking forces from outside the area that have devastated the region.

I may wait till the weekend to start it; I have a lot going on in the next few days, and I think it is going to need slow reading.
adair: stack of books (books)
What I Finished
I've been browsing here and there, not finishing much, but I did finish Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer. It was apparently shortlisted for some awards, but I seem to pay no attention to those since I missed it, and found it offered for cheap on Bookbub. The short description attracted me so I downloaded it. It's a political story, but not the sort I expected. For me the real feature was the world Palmer created, with the political structure and beliefs based on 18th century philosophy, particularly Voltaire. In their late teens or early twenties people seem to choose the belief structure they want to live under and find a group that operates in that way. The punishment system is built from that, and the central character is in that punishment structure. The various affinity groups are in conflict, and there is a lot of argument; it's a talky book.

It was slow reading, and I am not all that familiar with the philosophical systems the world is allegedly built on. There may a a sequel; the book calls out for one. I will look for it after a little time away from this book.

What I am Reading Now
Yesterday Alliance Rising, Cherryh's latest arrived. I started it today and I will take my time with it. As the title suggests it's the development of the Alliance confederation that is a political structure in her Alliance/Union books. We've seen bits of it in later times, sometimes much later, but here we can see it developing. I am watching to see who and what make an appearance from her other books. So far it's James Robert Niehart of Finity's End, last seen as a man in retirement in the book of that name. Here he is around 25 or 30. There is also a Fletcher, who is probably the Fletcher mentioned in that book as an honored memory. The Konstantins, Carnaths and Emorys are mentioned.
I'm just on page 48, so there is a lot more to find out. Sol activities are prominent, and I am trying hard to remember the timing of some of the details from other books. I think it is readable by people who have not read all the other Alliance/Union books but having done so adds a pleasure, and a bit of thinking work for me.

What I'll Read Next

I don't know. I am working on my east wall of bookshelves, trying to edit them and get them into LibraryThing. This is slow, and deciding what to get rid of is never easy, but sometimes I find something to at least browse, and maybe settle into rereading. Who knows what will turn up. The last was Peter Dickinson's The Flight of Dragons, which I had forgotten about, but had it on my bottom shelf of taller books.
adair: (Default)
Some of my life in 2018

It’s been a bit of a slug for a lot of the time, and not really fannish. I was kind of pushed into Vikings, and it turned out to be more interesting to watch than I expected. B and I started from the beginning - bought some DVDs and then with our new tv acquired Roku and worked out how to stream the last season. We are now watching episodes as they are shown; that’s not something I am used to, and am always surprised at the commercials. That’s about as close to fannish as I have been this year.

I have occasionally looked at fanfic, especially for book fic, and I have some saved for probably re-reading. I am certainly not abandoning fandom, but I am easing back quite a bit for now.

Movies in Theatres
I found my stashed ticket stubs; there are 4. I think there may have been one or 2 more movies but I don’t remember them.
In January 2018
Star Wars: the Last Jedi I recognized the setting for the Jedi retreat and was glad to see Skellig Michael on film. I’ve read several things mentioning it - most recently Sun Dancing by Geoffrey Moorhouse - and saw my mental picture confirmed.

The Darkest Hour B wanted to see this, so we went. I found it just a little romanticized, but the last line - paraphrased here “He seized the English language and took it into battle” seemed appropriate for that place in the movie.

In May 2018
Lean On Pete I read a review and made B go to see it, even though I knew it was rather depressing for him. I recommend it, and I recommend Willy Vlautin’s books - Lean On Pete and others. They are about young men on the social edge, usually in small Plains or western towns. Not my life, but I know what drives much of it.

In December 2018
Fantastic Beasts: the Crimes of Grindelwald Not as much fun action with the beasts as the first movie, getting dark early and staying there, but worth seeing, and I will see any sequels.

I have streaming capability now, and I have looked at a few movies there but did not make notes and have no ticket stubs, so I really don’t remember the much. Possibly I should keep a list this year.

Life Events
I got hit in the face by a folded table being handed down to me. This took me to the emergency room and a CT scan there started my GP on ordering a series of tests. She also want’s me to take statins; I don’t want to, but she made me see a cardiologist. I had a carotoid artery scan, an MRA of the blood paths in my brain, a stress echocardiogram, and a regular echocardiogram. What all these amounted to was I mostly need more exercise, which I knew, and the statins are recommended, but I don’t want to take them. I compromised on a baby aspirin a day. I am pushing myself to take at least a 30 min. walk per day, and push my walking speed. I am trying to work out a way to get in some work with weights. I have a brain MRI scheduled for Thursday, and an appt. with a neurologist on Tuesday, so I am still looking into things, but nothing is as scary as the cardiologist tried to make it.

I moved 343 books out of my house in 2018. There is no real visible difference, and I did not keep count of what came in, but I consider that an achievement. Keeping count as they left seemed to encourage letting go of more. I will do the same this year.

Reading

Nov. 28th, 2018 06:09 pm
adair: (Default)
some of what I read in the last month

I ended my John Adams theme with American Dialog by Joseph Ellis. It's a look at 4 Founding Fathers and how things they wrote and dealt with are playing out today. It's easy to read - 4 segments each in two parts. Race has Jefferson, Equality = Adams Law - James Madison Abroad - Washington. I found it well worth reading because each chapter topic is still in current debate, and a lot of that debate goes back to the founding.

I had just heard of the Murderbot Diaries, the last novella was just published, and I needed a break from history, so I read them all one after another. I loved them, and am waiting for the novel that is promised. The only way I can think of to describe it is the coming of age of an A.I. The world is interesting too, with robots at all levels running a lot of the systems.

I did a lot of flipping and dipping through books. I did finish Lockstep by Karl Schroeder. This involved cold sleep, and an empire maintained for millennia by hibernation. People travel for years while sleeping and the wake for weeks in new places. A lot of it makes little sense to me, and it really is a YA novel, but I finished it. I read bits and pieces of No Ordinary Time; Franklin & Eleanor Roosevelt; the home front in world war II by Doris Kearns Goodwin. I knew a lot less than I thought I did about these people and this time. I would like to be able to talk with my parents, who lived through it, but that is no longer possible.

I am now reading The Gate Keeper, the latest Charles Todd mystery. I seem to be reading about the past or the future; the present is too stressful to contemplate.
adair: (Default)
What I finished reading
I just finished reading (re-reading, actually) Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells. This is a series of four novellas. The first, All Systems Red appeared in 2017 and won the Hugo, the Nebula, and a couple of other awards for novellas. Somehow I missed it. Two more appeared, Artificial Condition and Rogue Protocol during 2018, and the final one Exit Strategy was published on October 3, just in time for me to discover them all and read them one after another.

When asked I usually say it is a robot coming-of-age story; that's not quite right but is the best description I have come up with. The world-building and the Murderbot character are inextricably twined round one another - a lot to think about, and to connect to that sf trope of building upon current social or science notions today. And, of course, Murderbot is a fan. He, (yes, I think of Murderbot as male) watches media he downloads and stores in his large data storage space. He has favorite shows and series, and uses watching some of them as a calming method. I recommend these novellas highly, and suggest you plan to read the all one after another. I immediately re-read them all, and am eagerly awaiting the Murderbot novel promised in 2020.

What I am reading now

I spent a lot of time working through David McCullough's biography of John Adams, then took a break to read Murderbot and other bits and pieces of re-reading. I am now back on the John Adams trail, reading Passionate Sage; the character and legacy of John Adams by Joseph Ellis. This is a look at Adams in retirement from politics, but not from thinking and commenting on political theory of the building of a new government on what might be a new foundation. I just finished the chapter focussing on his letters with Jefferson. Ellis has a lot to say about how Adams' temperament formed his writing and his thinking, and how his thinking was often finished by reaction to others. In other words, he was a deep thinker, but not a person who organized his writing an a logical pattern leading to straightforward conclusions. Historians have used the marginal notes in his books (librarians would hate him if he borrowed them from a public collection) to work out how his ideas developed. Ellis's chapter The American Dialogue looks at the letters Jefferson and Adams exchanged after both left politics and were examining what they did to make the Revolution happen and how they influenced it. One sentence from Adams to Jefferson says a lot
"You and I ought not to die, before We have explained ourselves to each other." Ellis looks at this exchange as they try to clarify their revolutionary thinking, and sorts it out for the modern reader.
All this is fascinating, and not something I have seen before in my bits and pieces of reading early American history.

What will I read next

I had Passionate Sage sitting around for a while, and was just considering taking it up when I found a book review in the New York Times Book Review of another book by Joseph Ellis. The is American Dialogue; the founders and us. Recognize the title? This discusses, Jefferson, Adams, Madison and Washington. To quote the jacket blurb
"Ellis...explores anew four of our most prominent founders, in each instance searching for patterns and principles that bring the lamp of experience to our contemporary dilemmas." Another quotation

"Ellis reminds us that the founders' greatest legacy lies not in providing political answers but in helping us find a better way to frame the question."

It is going to take time to work my way through both Ellis books, but I think they are worth the effort.
adair: (Default)
I know I have not posted for a while; i’ve had some car issues and family stuff, but I am mostly in the world of the slug - I do not want to do anything. Procrastination is always a factor for me, but it has been worse lately. However, I just found out something I need to tell people about.

Last year I told you about Adam Grey, the man who was in prison since he was 14, and who finally was exonerated after 24 years. I have another story like that, this one from California. I will add some links you might want to read.

Kenneth E. Hartman, who wrote Mother California, the book that really expanded the attention I have been giving to prisons and the criminal justice system, in April 2017 received a commutation of sentence, changing it from Life Without Parole to 25 years to life, which made him immediately eligible for parole consideration, since he has been inside for 37 years. In December 2017 he was paroled.

Hartman has been very quiet on line, and in his article publication - the last I know was at The Marshall Project in 2016. I suspect that was needed to not stir any possible major opposition to the commutation or the parole. According to an article on Truthout; (I got the link from my regular email posting from Prison Legal News) Hartman is currently taking his message to universities and schools throughout the country. I hope he comes here; Illinois has no death penalty but it has plenty of Natural Life sentences - I send books to some of the people serving them.

Sometimes good things happen that you never expected.

Here is a link to his Wikipedia page. It has not been updated to reflect his parole, but there are several links to some of his articles. I recommend Christmas in Prison from Harpers, December 1914. It is a history of his prison life, and a look at the 3 different California prisons he spent time in.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_E._Hartman


This is a link to the Truthout article. It is long, but is about the efforts to end Life Without Parole, usually noted as LWOP, with more links to Kenneth Hartman’s work.

https://truthout.org/articles/fighting-to-end-the-other-death-sentence-life-without-parole/
adair: (Default)
I know I have not posted for a while; i’ve had some car issues and family stuff, but I am mostly in the world of the slug - I do not want to do anything. Procrastination is always a factor for me, but it has been worse lately. However, I just found out something I need to tell people about.

Last year I told you about Adam Grey, the man who was in prison since he was 14, and who finally was exonerated after 24 years. I have another story like that, this one from California. I will add some links you might want to read.

Kenneth E. Hartman, who wrote Mother California, the book that really expanded the attention I have been giving to prisons and the criminal justice system, in April 2017 received a commutation of sentence, changing it from Life Without Parole to 25 years to life, which made him immediately eligible for parole consideration, since he has been inside for 37 years. In December 2017 he was paroled.

Hartman has been very quiet on line, and in his article publication - the last I know was at The Marshall Project in 2016. I suspect that was needed to not stir any possible major opposition to the commutation or the parole. According to an article on Truthout; (I got the link from my regular email posting from Prison Legal News) Hartman is currently taking his message to universities and schools throughout the country. I hope he comes here; Illinois has no death penalty but it has plenty of Natural Life sentences - I send books to some of the people serving them.

Sometimes good things happen that you never expected.

Here is a link to his Wikipedia page. It has not been updated to reflect his parole, but there are several links to some of his articles. I recommend Christmas in Prison from Harpers, December 1914. It is a history of his prison life, and a look at the 3 different California prisons he spent time in.

This is a link to the Truthout article. It is long, but is about the efforts to end Life Without Parole, usually noted as LWOP, with more links to Kenneth Hartman’s work.

https://truthout.org/articles/fighting-to-end-the-other-death-sentence-life-without-parole/

I know I have not posted for a while; i’ve had some car issues and family stuff, but I am mostly in the world of the slug - I do not want to do anything. Procrastination is always a factor for me, but it has been worse lately. However, I just found out something I need to tell people about.

Last year I told you about Adam Grey, the man who was in prison since he was 14, and who finally was exonerated after 24 years. I have another story like that, this one from California. I will add some links you might want to read.

Kenneth E. Hartman, who wrote Mother California, the book that really expanded the attention I have been giving to prisons and the criminal justice system, in April 2017 received a commutation of sentence, changing it from Life Without Parole to 25 years to life, which made him immediately eligible for parole consideration, since he has been inside for 37 years. In December 2017 he was paroled.

Hartman has been very quiet on line, and in his article publication - the last I know was at The Marshall Project in 2016. I suspect that was needed to not stir any possible major opposition to the commutation or the parole. According to an article on Truthout; (I got the link from my regular email posting from Prison Legal News) Hartman is currently taking his message to universities and schools throughout the country. I hope he comes here; Illinois has no death penalty but it has plenty of Natural Life sentences - I send books to some of the people serving them.

Sometimes good things happen that you never expected.

Here is a link to his Wikipedia page. It has not been updated to reflect his parole, but there are several links to some of his articles. I recommend Christmas in Prison from Harpers, December 1914. It is a history of his prison life, and a look at the 3 different California prisons he spent time in.

This is a link to the Truthout article. It is long, but is about the efforts to end Life Without Parole, usually noted as LWOP, with more links to Kenneth Hartman’s work.

https://truthout.org/articles/fighting-to-end-the-other-death-sentence-life-without-parole/

I can't get the commutation itself to post - I tried to drag and drop the rtfd, but it wants to link it to my desktop. It is real.
adair: (Default)
I am still working through McCullough's John Adams. We had a visitor this week so I did not get much real reading time. Adams is now in his second term, political parties are in development, and he hates that. Mike just got home, so I hope I can now get in some more reading time.

Dream Hoarders; how the American upper middle class is leaving everyone else in the dust, why that is a problem, and what to do about it by Richard Reeves arrived yesterday while we were at lunch and at Best Buy finally replacing our old tvs. (Mike was a great help; without him we would probably still not have made the plunge.) The jacket note says An Economist Best Book of the Year meaning 2017. I started reading the prologue and part of the first chapter before I slept. This is something I have been aware for for quite a while; class has always seemed a big reason for a lot of neoliberal notions but no one was willing to talk about it. I'm from a rural working class background, tried to register as a socialist when I turned 21, did a lot of labor union work during my employment. Reading an economist's take on what I have observed over the years is something I am happy to do. I am going to read a chapter at a time rather than gallop through the book as I sometimes do.
adair: Acropolis (Acropolis)
I have finished St. Patrick's Gargoyle. It's a light but not fluffy story featuring a tour of Dublin's churches, information about the modern Knights of Malta, driving in Dublin, and the practices of a colony of gargoyles who inhabit Dublin buildings, especially churches. God and his angels are mentioned and Christian practices show up a lot. I read it in segments while riding a city bus here and there, and enjoyed it very much. You need a little tolerance for whimsey, but it is not overblown and all in all worth reading. I am glad I picked it up in the B2P workroom. Katherine Kurtz may have intended it as the first of a series, but I have not looked to see if there are any more.


I am still reading David McCullough's John Adams. I am a little more than half-way through and now find Adams preparing to be the first Vice President of the United States and already aware that is not the best fit for him. Here is a quotation from his opening speech to the Senate

But if from inexperience or inadvertency, anything should ever escape me inconsistent with propriety, I must entreat you, by putting it to its true cause and not to any want of respect, to pardon and excuse me.

The Vice President oversees the Senate, but does not take part in discussion, or vote unless there is a tie. Adams is afraid he can't keep from trying to partake in debate since advocacy has been his principle skill in all his public life. He has opinions and wants to express them, but as Vice President he cannot, yet he will be constantly in a place where debate is the main purpose. I am expecting trouble here, and Adams does too. He knows himself very well.

I will continue reading John Adams, I hope to finish it next week.
adair: black horse by the sea (horse)
I have not finished David McCullough's John Adams, nor do I expect to for some time. There is no slogging involved, but close attention is needed, and the book, at more that 700 pages in paperback, is too heavy to carry on the bus. I mostly read it in the evening, and while in bed. Currently I find John Adams on his second trip to France, crossing the Pyrenees on mules, accompanied by his assistant, his secretary, two servants and his two oldest sons - one 15, one nine. They arrived in Spain on a leaking ship that had to struggle to reach the nearest port while being pumped by crew and passengers 24 hours a day. Adams has been appointed by Congress to negotiate treaties of peace and commerce with Great Britain. This is in January 1780.

One issue I have with this book is that it is hard to keep track of the dates. We are told the months, but not always the year; I suppose we are expected to remember it from the times we are given a complete date, but I am am reading in segments and forget just what year things are taking place. I would have liked an appendix with events in Adams' live organized by date, or year at least, so I could refer to this list when I need it.

I will continue John Adams; it is well worth reading, but I pulled a lightweight paperback from the B2P workroom for carrying with me to read on the bus or in coffeeshops. St. Patrick's Gargoyle is by Katherine Kurtz, who in 2001 apparently needed a break form Deryni novels. I had never heard of this, but it appears to involve a gargoyle in Dublin who sets out for revenge when vandals break into his cathedral but gets into something greater. I will start it on the bus tomorrow. It takes about 30 minutes from my house to B2P, so I should get through a chapter or two.
adair: stack of books (books)
I finished

I am still in my John Adams/Revolution theme. I just finished David McCullough's 1776, mostly about George Washington and the battles of that year. It begins with the siege of Boston, and ends, of course, with Trenton and the Christmas crossing of the Delaware. Washington is the central figure, but McCullough brings in a lot of people who supported him, or had special roles in particular battles. I moved quickly through it - the political and regional issues that interest me most are sidelines here.

I am now reading

I have begun McCullough's John Adams, apparently a Pulitzer Prize winner, published in 2001. I was apparently not paying much attention to American history at that time because I do not remember it.
This is a full-scale biography, making a lot of use of the vast Adams Archives. He wrote, and saved copies, a lot of letters, as did his wife and his son John Quincy. It is certainly the most detailed archive for any of our Founding Fathers. Adams also observed and commented on many of the people he met; McCullough speculates that in a different time and circumstances Adams might have been a major novelist.

I am about one sixth of the way through the book; just reached 1776 in March, and the Continental Congress is meeting in Philadelphia. Reading is going to be slow; it demands attention of detail, and it is holding my interest. McCullough is one of those historians who can write for the general reader while keeping up with the myriad events of that time.

what will I read next

If I don't burn out on John Adams my next book will be Passionate Sage; the character and legacy of John Adams by Joseph Ellis. This apparent looks at his writing and letters after the presidency, including a long conversation with Jefferson and an exchange with Benjamin Rush in which they talked about their own characters and inner lives - not something most people in political office do.
adair: stack of books (books)
I just finished reading Revolutionary Summer and First Family; Abigail and John Adams, both by Joseph J. Ellis, who has written a lot of very readable history around the American Revolution. This has not been a reading interest for me until recently. On July 4 I watched 1776, a musical film about the Continental Congress actions that led to the writing of the Declaration of Independence. It is not by any means historically accurate in the details but takes a look at three major people involved - John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson. John Adams was a revelation to me - none of my history classes in high school made much of him, and the 1-semester college class hustled through the revolution to get to the American Civil War.

The next week I saw Revolutionary Summer on top of a box of donated books at Books to Prisoners, so I bought it and began reading right away. It covers the Continental Congress in Philadelphia from March to August 1776 - mostly about the arguments that took place, the coming and going of delegates, the correspondence and notes about the discussion of whether or not to declare independence from the British government. Much of this detail was new to me, the state of the discussions, the military action the pushed it in various directions, and the range of people who took part. John Adams was the major proponent of independence who recruited Jefferson to write the Declaration, defended it from a lot of editing, and got it given unanimous vote in the Congress.

I wanted to know more about him, so I hunted around and found First Family. John and his wife Abigail exchanged and kept many, many letters while John was away from home, discussing family issues and political actions in detail. Abigail was a very independent thinker, corresponded with many people about the issues, supported her husband but never hesitated to argue with him. Joseph Ellis discusses their personalities, which are revealed in the letter between themselves and with others, observes the stresses on their relationship and the support they gave each other. This is historical writing, not cosy history, and is well supported. The Adams Papers are vast, not yet fully cataloged, but Ellis had access and used them to the hilt.

I seem to be into a reading theme here, so I got David McCullough's John Adams and 1776. McCullough is a popular historian whose work covers a much wider range; the Wright Brothers, Truman, Teddy Roosevelt, the Johnstown Flood, among other topics, but he seems to be generally respected. I want to see how he treats Adams and 1776,so both books are going to keep me busy for a while
adair: stack of books (books)
what I finished reading

I just finished two YA novels by Eleanor Updale - Montmorency and Montmorency on the Rocks. They are part of a 5-book series; I found the first one in the Books to Prisoners workroom - the best used bookstore in town - and liked it well enough to buy all the others as ebooks.

YA books can be iffy; sometimes they are very good and sometimes teen-pleasing but not of adult interest. These work for me in a number of ways. The writing is very skillful; the later books drop information form the earlier books just as needed and never feeling like infodump. The plots work to let that happen and to keep things moving in an entertaining way. The books are set in late Victorian and Edwardian London (with moves in and out) and feature a lot of various social conditions of the time. Montmorency is a small-time thief who ends up in prison and finds a way to remake himself. I won't say much more in respect of people who care about spoilers, but both the books I have read involve people who maintain more than one identity.

what I'm currently reading

I am now reading the 3rd book in the series Montmorency and the Assassins but have had to stop while my ereaders recharge; I let them get below 10% on the batteries. This one involves Italian anarchist societies around 1890 - new to me - and continues the character and social history process I liked in the earlier books. Updale by no means sets up moral absolutes, and respects the motives and limited choices of criminals, prisoners, political action, poverty, - these are YA books that might open up worlds to people with little experience outside their own world, but are by no means lectures. There is a fair amount of action, and some light humor.

what will I read next

I will probably finish the Montmorency series, and perhaps read a couple of M/M ebooks recommended by [personal profile] 0ftgx.
adair: I have a terribel sleeping disorer; it's called reading (reading)
I have been slugging for the past two weeks; I just do not want to do anything. I have been reading, I do not think I can make it through a day without that, but I have been messing around on my ipad - mostly newspapers - and doing a re-read of Ben Aaronovich's Rivers of London books. I got the latest graphic novel -Cry Fox in the mail and then started picking up the older novels almost at random. I have now started at the first novel and am working my way to the last one that I recently re-read. This is not one of my standard re-read authors, but it seems to work for now, when I do not want to DO anything.

I may get back to the latest book meme eventually; got stuck on the one about a book that reminds me of someone I love. My brain does not want to make the effort, or on any of the later memes.

I have managed to get my doctor to increase my thyroid meds; this is the 4th day of the increase, so it is not really time to expect any change yet, but I hope to see a difference in another week or so.

I just finished reading Moon Over Soho. The next should be Whispers Under Ground but that was one I picked up randomly, so I now have Broken Homes. I would not have predicted that these books would really interest me, but there is something about the use of language, the oddity of English police organization, the way magic fits into it, the look at London as a modern urban structure - my reading of British mysteries and books set in London tend to be about earlier eras = probably the 40s at the latest, so it is a new world to me.

book meme 9

Jun. 9th, 2018 08:29 pm
adair: (Default)
9. Film or Tv tie-in

I have several of these; they tend to cluster in a double-shelved bookcase near my computer desk. I am just looking to the left now. I see Homicide, Buffy, Angel, Firefly and Serenity, Highlander, Space: Above and Beyond, Babylon 5, and I know there are some Beauty and the Beast and Alien Nation although these are not immediately visible. I just spotted a couple of Blake's Seven books, and I know I have Paul Darrow's Avon story.

I do not have complete sets of the published books except for Beauty and the Beast-the first series with Ron Perlman, and Alien Nation For some of them I also have the DVD series, some not. I have not done any rewatching in several years, although I may come to it. I have been thinking about Space: Above and Beyond from time to time, so it might become a winter binge watch, especially if I get sick and don't go the the B2P workroom for a while. I have not done any book re-reading either; I have taken part of my Buffy collection to B2P; we get requests for it every now and then. I may consider thinning more of the tie-in books as part of my Remove 500 Books project. That has slowed down considerably; I need time to pull books off the shelves, make decisions, record what I keep in LibraryThing and note just where it is shelved.

Are there any I am particularly fond of and want to talk about now? Not really; the Paul Darrow book Avon; a terrible aspect will probably go. Darrow did not see Avon as I did; I think he played Avon in a more subtle way than he knew.

book meme 8

Jun. 8th, 2018 05:16 pm
adair: (me)
have more than one copy

I have quite a few books in more than one copy. What this says about my acquisitive and accumulating nature is probably more than I want to think about just now. A few appeared as in the previous post; I forgot I had it or had already ordered it. As I come across them now I am moving one copy on, but for a while I had trouble doing that. Most of my duplicate titles involve different formats - hardcover and paperback, because the paperback was easier to carry around, or I could lend it out, but at least one is kept because the paperback was the first copy I found, and I am deeply attached to the memory of that find.

That book is Rosemary Sutcliff's Sword at Sunset. It's a Crest Reprint, with an edition copyright of 1964. The general copyright is in 1963; the verso of the title page tells my it was a Literary Guild selection in June 1963. The book got a fair amount of attention, but I was a junior in high school in 63 and had little access to any reviews or publisher notices. I knew some of Sutcliff's work; I found Eagle of the Ninth The Lantern Bearers and Warrior Scarlet in my high school library. I had no real way to research her work, so I read and re-read them

Went to the U of I in the fall of 1964. It took a while to do much library research for reading. In 1965 I got a job in the Undergraduate Library, and had more time to browse, and a little money to spend on books, but most of that went to the Union Book Center, which had more books for sale than I had ever seen in one place, and a lot of good paperback reprints. I was used to seeing mostly drugstore books, so that was a great discovery.

At Christmastime I was at home, and shopping with my mother in Decatur. We went into Haines and Essex, a sort of pen and stationary and notebooks and ink store which also had a fair book section, possibly the best in Decatur. I was browsing, not really expecting to buy anything, when I saw Rosemary Sutcliff and Sword at Sunset on the spine. I pulled it out; there was picture of a knight on horseback, not quite the usual armor, a sword held up rather like a cross, and a flaming sunset in the background. Above the title was "A brilliant new re-creation of the Arthurian legend...A masterpiece" - Chicago Tribune. I knew at once this was for me. It cost 95 cents - most paperbacks cost 75 cents and were not so big - this one has 479 pages. I took it home, read in during that holiday and re-read it a number of times in the next few years.

As I found ways to do so I looked for more Sutcliff; found another title in the Uni High library when I was doing a teaching practicum. I was not quite prepared to try to persuade the Undergrad Librarian to buy Sutcliff for the library when I was working there as a student, but I did suggest some when I later was a library clerk there, typing order forms for the books we ordered. I also discovered that as staff I could order books through our acquisitions dept, and discovered Blackwells in England, and found out how to pay with an international money order. I ordered the British editions that were not available in the US; this was my first step into book buying outside of finding one on the shelves of a local book store, and I've never looked back.

I have at least 4 editions of Sword at Sunset bought over the last 50 years. Two are hardcover, one is a different, newer paperback edition, and one is an e-book. I have not re-read it for several years, and I thing The Lantern Bearers is so closely related that it must be read just before reading Sword, but I know the time to re-read will come. I will not read my first paperback; it is fragile and the pages are somewhat stained, but I will keep it. It lives in the Sutcliff section of my bookcases, crowed though that section is.

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