by Neil White
from Booklist: White was a successful magazine publisher in 1993 when he was convicted
of fraud and check kiting and sentenced to prison in Carville,
Louisiana. He knew he was facing 18 months without his wife and two
young children; he knew his enormous ego and ambition had landed him in
prison; he knew he had to figure out a way to save his marriage and
somehow rebound financially. What he didn’t know was that the isolated
100-year-old facility at Carville was home to a leper colony of 130
patients. He learned that the patients (some severely disfigured and
disabled) and the 250 inmates eyed each other suspiciously across the
corridors and breezeway, each thinking the other was the scourge of the
earth. Because his work detail brought him into frequent contact with
the patients, White developed strong relationships with them. His
favorite was Ella, a dignified and beatific elderly black woman, who had
lived at Carville for more than 50 years. Among the inmates, White
encountered counterfeiters and tax evaders along with drug traffickers
and carjackers. When the Bureau of Prisons decided to evict the leprosy
patients, tensions built on both sides. White, near the end of his
sentence and struggling to come to grips with the consequences of his
crime, is caught in the middle. He offers a memoir of personal
transformation and a thoroughly engaging look at the social, economic,
racial, and other barriers that separate individuals that harden,
dissolve, and reconfigure themselves when people are involuntarily
thrust together over long periods. --Vanessa Bush
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable
edition of this title.
I read this recently and found it moving on many levels. Anyone interested in leprosy, social outcasts, the effects of imprisonment on people with infectious disease as well as incarceration will benefit from reading Neil White's memoir. If you want more, get a copy of Gavin Daw's superb "Holy man: Father Damien if Molokai."