A lot of punch in this readable, eloquent prison memoir
5 stars
I'm not usually a fan of poetry, I have a lot of taste in my mouth from bad, self-important and unpracticed open-mic performances over the years. But Rosenbergs wielding of words, prose and a few poems, in this book is pretty impressive. Her writing style is generally matter-of-fact but she's able to encapsulate rich emotional meaning in small moments that crack the surface.
I was enticed to read this book for a few reasons... First up, Susan Rosenberg will be speaking on a (n online) panel put on by our local anarchist bookstore alongside Herman Bell, David Gilbert and Eric King, all former political prisoners to speak about the recently published "Rattling The Cages" book (definitely worth a gander, lots of insights from former and current political prisoners on Turtle Island). Second, Susan was involved in the May 19th Communist Organization, a group I don't know a lot about besides that it was an anti-racist and anti-Imperialist organization that included Weathermen, Black Liberation Army, Republic of New Afrika and Prairie Fire Organization. M19CO was responsible for the liberation Assata Shakur and the Brinks heist (and a number of bombings of buildings associated with US Imperialism that mostly succeeded in having no casualties). Third, the experience of someone with a good read on patriarchy spending 16 years in BOP womens prisons (and jails in DC & NYC) was insightful, since many prisoner voices I run across are folks in mens prisons. Fourth, Ms. Rosenberg was also a former member of the John Brown Anti-Klan Committee, and as an anti-racist Jewish woman had good grounds for critiquing the systemic racism that she saw in US "Justice", but then through the rise of mass incarceration with the "War On Drugs" as well as being in a position to elaborate her experiences of antisemitism and Christian supremacy on a personal and systemic level in the belly of the beast. Fifth, and dovetailing the last point, as a queer woman she also witnessed the HIV/AIDS crisis and was one of the leftist prisoners who worked to shift policy in her facilities as well as engage in grassroots educational and health initiatives as that terrible tide swept the majority poor and Black populations she was incarcerated among. I think lastly, because of the social viewpoint that Ms. Rosenberg exuded throughout the book, her empathy and awareness of social, cultural and systemic inequities and how they distilled behind bars, she had a humanized view of so many of the people she was locked up alongside, engaged with her community behind bars to build solidarity and expressed the heavy losses of people to the cruelty of the US carceral system (through medical neglect, through active counter-insurgency tactics of divide and rule, through the attempted breaking of the spirit into subservient subjects, the criminalization of love behind bars, and through the breakdown of community people had with loved ones on the outside).
It's a heavy book, emotionally, but a really important one. And the poetry is good! I'm pretty sure the book is out of print but it had a big run in 2011 so copies are plentiful and cheap from online sellers.