Hidden Mirrors with Alan Huffman
Our book discussions are on hold as we await more copies of the next selection, so today's meeting takes a turn toward writing. The club has no shortage of aspiring authors. Micharlos wants to organize a group book, each member writing a chapter about their life in prison – not about their crimes, but about transformation and hard-won lessons. He even has a working title: Trapped in a Mason Jar, an allusion to the capacity to preserve things of value, but with an everpresent risk that the results will go rank. Dollar's father is pushing him to write a memoir. X-man says he has filled journals for years and is looking for a path to publication. Jonathan is working on movie scripts and a semi-autobiographical novel. Wes, who already writes for the corrections company's in-house magazine, with a notebook always at hand – deeply regrets throwing away journals from his twenties. "That's one of the stupidest things I've ever done," he says. The conversation opens up something personal and visceral. Wes puts it plainly: people on the outside forget that the men here are sons, husbands, brothers, uncles. They've made serious mistakes, and most of them admit that unflinchingly, yet that isn't the whole story, and it's not the only story these men want to tell. There are real obstacles, though. X-man lays them out in a written message he later sends: no typewriters, no laptops, submission guidelines that don't accommodate handwritten work, shakedowns that destroy months of writing. Battle, on the other hand, wants no part of this endeavor, though he'd be happy to talk while someone else transcribes what he says for the envisioned group book. Next up: Framed, co-authored by John Grisham and Jim McCloskey, about wrongful convictions. Even from inside prison, it'll shake some assumptions loose. Books mentioned: Framed, co-authored by John Grisham and Jim McCloskey | The Tragedy of True Crime by John J. Lennon | The Bone Tree by Greg Iles. Podcast funding from the McMullan-O'Connor Fund; book club sponsored by the Mississippi Humanities Council. Engineered by Jesse Naus, Shawn Jackson and Charlie Sensabaugh at Red Cayman Studios, with assistant producer Amanda Akari. Edited and hosted by Alan Huffman. Support and recordings provided by Management and Training Corporation, operator of the Wilkinson County Correctional Facility for the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Special thanks to Robert Connolly Farr for use of his song "Everybody's Dying."
13 episodios
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