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Back from the Dead: One Woman's Search for the Men Who Walked off America's Death Row
 
 

Back from the Dead: One Woman's Search for the Men Who Walked off America's Death Row [Kindle Edition]

Joan M. Cheever
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Review

…an extraordinary achievement…bittersweet…powerful" (The Irish Independent Supplement, July 2006)


  “…amazing narrative…” (Lancashire Evening Post, August 2006)

  “…important messages shine through…” (BB Focus Magazine, August 2006)

"A fabulous book about the darker side of human nature." (South Wales Argus, October 2006)

"...this volume is essential reading...Highly recommended." ( LibraryJournal.com, 2006)

"A riveting, if emotionally unsettling, book... impassioned, heartfelt, and moving..." ( New York Law Journal, November 2006)

"...an extraordinary report..." (The Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express, August 2006)


…an extraordinary achievement…bittersweet…powerful" (The Irish Independent Supplement, July 2006)

  “…amazing narrative…” (Lancashire Evening Post, August 2006)

  “…important messages shine through…” (BB Focus Magazine, August 2006)

"A fabulous book about the darker side of human nature." (South Wales Argus, October 2006)

"...this volume is essential reading...Highly recommended." ( LibraryJournal.com, 2006)

"A riveting, if emotionally unsettling, book... impassioned, heartfelt, and moving..." ( New York Law Journal, November 2006)

"...an extraordinary report..." (The Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express, August 2006)

Product Description

What would happen if the United States abolished the death penalty and emptied its Death Rows? If  killers were released from prison? What would they do with their second chance to live? Would they kill again?

Back From The Dead is the story of  589 former death row inmates who, through a lottery of fate, were given a second chance at life in 1972 when the death penalty was abolished; it returned to the United States four years later.

During the years she represented Walter Williams on Texas’ Death Row, Cheever always wondered what would happen if his death sentence was reversed and he was eventually  released from prison. Would he have killed again? Two years after Williams’ execution,  Cheever was determined to find the answer. Leaving her young family and comfortable life in suburbia, she traveled across the U.S. and into the lives and homes of  former Death Row inmates, armed only with a tape recorder, notepad, a cell phone that didn’t always work, and a lot of faith. In Back from the Dead , Cheever describes her own journey and reveals these tales of second chances: of tragedy and failure, racism and injustice, and redemption and rehabilitation.

Visit www.backfromthedeadusa.com to find out more.

Back From the Dead is an excellent choice for your Book Reading Group or School Group. On the website www.backfromthedeadusa.com there are questions for group discussion, as well as an 'interview with the Author'.

Joan Cheever will chat by speakerphone with any group that chooses Back From the Dead. Now you have the chance to ask your questions directly to the author. Why did Joan Cheever write this book? What was she looking for? Did she find it? How did she research Back From the Dead? What difficulties did she encounter? What was it like, interviewing and meeting former Death Row inmates? How did she leave her little children to do this? What was she feeling while on the road with The Class of '72? What was the most surprising thing she learned in writing about the men whose return address had once been: Death Row USA.

A chat with the author is FREE – just get a group of readers together and make sure you have a speakerphone and Joan Cheever will do the rest!

How to Make a Request for a Telephone Conversation with the Author
Your request for a speakerphone chat with Joan Cheever can be made through the form on this page:

http://www.backfromthedeadusa.com/book_groups_form.html

Here are the guidelines:
• Chats are scheduled between 9 AM Central and 8 PM Central time. (All time requests must be converted to Central Time.)

• You'll be asked to provide a choice of dates and times. The more dates you can provide, the easier it will be to schedule a chat. The time you request should be 30 minutes to an hour after your group begins meeting so your group has some time to settle in first.

• Leave a comment to let Joan know how you found out about the book and why you chose it for your group. Also, tell Joan a little bit about your book group – what other books you’ve been reading, the range of ages in the group, where you are from etc.

• Chats are not limited only to readers of Back From the Dead in the United States. As long as it can be scheduled within the hours listed above, Joan welcomes a conversation with readers across the globe.

• And if a chat is not possible, Joan is working on setting up an online 'Instant Message' discussion so that readers can ask the questions they have AND get an immediate response online during your meeting!

The Chat Details
Once you’ve made your request, we will be back in touch with you, usually within a few days. Together we will determine the date and time for the chat.

You will need access to a speaker telephone. Joan recommends giving it a trial run beforehand by having someone in your group dial in to that phone from outside. Make sure that you can hear her clearly—and that she can hear you from a good distance away.

Plan for Joan to call you 30 minutes to an hour after your group gets together. At that point you will have begun your discussion about Back From the Dead and Joan will be able to answer the questions from the author’s perspective!

At the appointed time, Joan will call in and for the next 30 - 45 minutes, you can put your feet up, relax and find out more about Back From the Dead, the author, her research and any news updates.


Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 2469 KB
  • Print Length: 320 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0470017503
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (11 July 2006)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0017AML2M
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #142,549 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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More About the Author

Joan M. Cheever
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Visit Amazon's Joan M. Cheever Page

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Class of '72 4 July 2006
Format:Hardcover
Like most Death Penalty Aficionados, I'd heard the name Furman

many times and had wondered what became of him, not to say the

rest of the condemned who were spared due to the US Supreme

Court's historic 1972 decision. Did living in the shadow of the

chair scare them straight when they finally got out of prison?

Therefore, I soon as I heard about this book, I eagerly snapped

it up!

It's a fairly short book and there's a fair bit of

autobiographical detail about the author Joan Cheever, which I

could've lived without (sorry Joan!).

The rest of it is partly about her experiences defending Walter

Williams, his subsequent execution in Texas in 1994 and her

attempts to meet his victim's - Daniel Liepold - mother. All

well and good, but this regrettably leaves little space for the

main course, which is meeting the "Class of '72".

The book deals with only a very few inmates out of the 580+ that

were on the USA's death rows in 1972 and, really, the information

about each is pretty sparse. She does interview the famous

Furman though and finds out what he's doing now. Maybe my

expectations were too much; after all, the "Class of '72" were

largely undereducated, poor and of course, convicted rapists/

murderers etc, so expecting them to be easy to find, willing to

tell their stories in a coherent fashion and for that to make a

gripping book was probably a long shot.

Joan draws some conclusions towards the end and I must say I'm

not entirely sure I agree with them. I don't think you can

equate waiting to be executed with a number of years in prison

with a release date.

If you're fascinated by the Death Penalty, then this book is

probably worth buying. It's certainly readable; however, I'd

have to say that it isn't as good as it could have been and,

overall, is a bit of a missed opportunity.
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too much detail! 13 Feb 2011
Format:Hardcover
I am an avid reader of true crime and forensics and when I saw this book I thought that it would be a change from my usual type of book in that it would concentrate on the aftermath of the temporary rescinding of the death penalty in the USA. Unfortunately it takes too long to get off the mark, dithering as if the author can't quite decide how to do it. Also so many totally insignificant details that I got lost several times and had to turn back pages to pick up the story again. Not enough about the core of the book and I gave up on most of it - something I very rarely do. Sorry Joan - a truly wasted opportunity on what should be an interesting slant on the US judicial system.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Tracking down 589 people is no small undertaking. Ms. Cheever not only does justice to the overwhelming task, but also delves into the depths of the Class of "72, who received a second chance at life after having been sentenced to death. While on her journey to find what became of the "lottery winners" of Furman v. Georgia, Ms. Cheever touches their souls while exposing her own. In the end the author learns the meaning of forgiveness and becomes "the healer" in a justice system wrought with injustice.

The reader learns where and who some of the reprieved convicts are today with the added insight of Ms. Cheever's underpinnings through snipets of her colorful Texas family. Just as the reader comes up for air, having met a former death row inmate and having heard the facts of his crime and punishment, the author teases the reader with a preview of the next unsavory character. At this juncture there is no option to book down the book. There is much to ponder. Kudos to Ms. Cheever whose Notes are as good as the book itself.
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