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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inside Rikers - A Roller Coaster Ride
In the book, Inside Rikers, the author combines statistics with insightful stories of inmates she met while inside Rikers Prison. The stories of inmates are highlighted with social commentary and emphasize the need for social and prison reform.

A compassionate advocate for prison reform Wynn writes from the perspective of her experience while teaching at Rikers Prison...

Published on December 28, 2003 by Richard R. Blake

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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Does not go into any detail
The book is really focused on the authors perspective of a few prisoners and their potential triumphs...many of which fail. It doesn't really give any insight into what it's like at Rikers or any other prison. It has a great cover and a terific title, but it ends there.
Published on April 8, 2007 by Nicholas J. Harmon


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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inside Rikers - A Roller Coaster Ride, December 28, 2003
In the book, Inside Rikers, the author combines statistics with insightful stories of inmates she met while inside Rikers Prison. The stories of inmates are highlighted with social commentary and emphasize the need for social and prison reform.

A compassionate advocate for prison reform Wynn writes from the perspective of her experience while teaching at Rikers Prison and while visiting the homes and neighborhoods of the inmates, whose stories she tells. These stories are well written and come across as genuine.

The roller coaster ride of those caught up in the drug cycle, poverty, crime, and arrest is oppressive and disturbing. I especially appreciated insight the author provided into the Methadone "Keep Program". This is only one area of great concern and needed investigation Wynn exposed. The success stories of those who were able to rise above the circumstances are both inspirational and encouraging.
Another insight I received was the tendency for a total lack of conscience experienced by the criminal mind.

I was sorry to come to end of the book. I was stirred to want to take action. I could only wish the author had given more specific suggestions for steps members of the community can take to accomplish some of the reform needs she advocates. The extensive bibliography at the end of the book may be the starting place for finding this help.

I recommend this book to be read and reread by everyone in a position of influence that can affect high-risk neighborhoods and communities.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A View from the Inside (Inside Rikers), September 9, 2001
By 
Ray Houle (Terryville, CT) - See all my reviews
I don't know if you've seen the movie, "Traffic", starring Michael Douglas. What's so great about that film is that it gives an outsider an insider's appreciation of the problems of drugs entering America. It's a movie that changes attitudes. "Inside Rikers" is that kind of book. Jennifer Wynn gives the outsider an insider's appreciation of the problems of people in prison. She gives an intimate look at some of these people, enough to give the reader a new appreciation for the challenges that these prisoners face on both sides of the prison door. It's up-close-and-personal, a great read, and you'll be thinking about this one a long time after you finish reading it. At least that's been true for me. Highly recommended.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inside Rikers, January 21, 2007
This review is from: Inside Rikers: Stories from the World's Largest Penal Colony (Paperback)
Since I've read books written by Correction Officers, Inside Rikers was an enlightening view from the other side of the penal colony. The thinking and mindset of the case studies was an education in itself as well as the mentality of our justice system.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Shocking insight into a social issue that effects EVERYONE, July 19, 2001
By A Customer
Inside Rikers is a thought provoking page-turner even for those that have never been involved in or affected by the criminal justice system in any way. A must read that will enlighten and open a window into a dark world that most people probably know very little about; however, the social ramifications to the average citizen are staggering! Jennifer Wynn takes the reader on a private tour into the lives of people that live in another world and yet perhaps in our own backyard. Jennifer presents an unbiased view of the life of a prisoner and ex-con, and a system that keeps them coming back to prison time and again.
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16 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Life on and of the 'Rock', July 22, 2001
Before I start This review a few notes, I have meet the author once or twice having worked in the same jail I also work or worked with all the officers named (a few have recently retired) in this book and know of nearly all the inmates in the book.

Jennifer Wynn is liberal and at times overly forgiving of inmates, (She's soft though not as much as I would have guessed) This was expected, she was a journalist and now works to help rehabilitate inmates as they reenter the street ('New York' as they say). In a few passages she uses worn out silly retoric of the left such as: The silly Jesse Jackson misdirect "It cost more to jail the to Yale" This of course is not just comparing apples and oranges it's comparing apples and mack trucks one has nothing what so ever to do with the other. At another point she notes that New Yok city spends about 5 times more per inmate in jail than it does on students in it's public school, again a bad comparision but since most (but no quite all) inmates on Rikers are at best funtional illiterates that rocked out of NYC public schools it probably says more about public schooling than it does about NYC jails.

Politics aside it is clear that Wynn has a truly Good heart and is generaly concerned and compassionate about helping inmates turn thier lives around and that is a good thing (and of course it is her job).

She has also writen a very readable honest look a the culture of Rikers Island and the innner city. Several passages made me chuckle out loud like her description of prision poetry and trying to teach inmates how to write real poetry. Every once in awhile there are paragraghs where it seems like she almost "gets it" for instance in one chapter she describes how a former inmate is showing off his 30 thousand dollars in ill gotten money to her. He explains to her that when his medicare is approved he will go into rehab at taxpayers expense her response is "'Medicaid? you don't need medicaid, Frank! you could pay for six months at Hazelden with this kind of money'. He didn't get it. he was so used to being taken care of by the state that the thought of paying for drug treatment didn't occour to him."

I found this book to more enjoyable the Ted Conovers's "Newjack" because in was not soley focused on the jail setting it takes a much wider view and encompases the everday life of inmates and former inmates as they struggle to stay straight. It is also more balanced in it's treatment of officers and inmates.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Inside Rikers Goes Inside the Heart, July 31, 2001
There may be criticisms of this book, the main one being that the author is an upper middle class white woman who cannot possibly understand or really appreciate or have anything useful to say that is not self-promoting on the underlying reality of the prison system and the people who populate it. But those who dismiss her and this book on these bases would be doing an injustice to these very people she is writing about.

Ms. Wynn is writing from a given perspective. And it is true that this perspective is not from that of the lives of the people she is writing about. But that is exactly what makes the book so powerful and so valuable. Until now, the prison population has been viewed as "them" or the "other." Most books describing the "system" have been written by former prisoners. But Ms. Wynn, writing as a "typical white liberal person," brings this foreign world (for most of us) into very sharp and disturbing focus.

People who read this book will come away understanding so much more about the prison system in the United States than they knew before. They will find that it is indeed a billion dollar industry, that in the short run it is a bureaucratic, shallow solution to a very deep problem. But one of the most important and profound insights to be gained is not what prison does to people, or how big an industry it has become, but rather how it is that a society that purports to be so advanced and so humanistic can have created such a living hell for so many millions of people who never really had a chance to begin with. Even more important is that some of the lives Ms. Wynn tells us about in this book are a testament to the strength of the human spirit, and that even in the face of profound adversity human beings can rise above almost any obstacle. Read this book.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Into The Belly of The Beast, June 9, 2007
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This review is from: Inside Rikers: Stories from the World's Largest Penal Colony (Paperback)
While the title of this book would indicate that it is a look inside Rikers Island and the prison colonies that are located there, it is so much more. Not only do you get a feel for the size and condition of the prison on Rikers, but you also get to meet inmates and correctional officers.

Much of the book revolves around the inmates that participate in a program called Fresh Start. It is a prison program designed to break the revolving door of recidivism. The program is designed to help give inmates a chance at a real job in the community and uses techniques such as writing assignments and job skills.

The author documents a number of inmates. Some are very successful, while others are total failures; she lets you see both sides of the story. In addition, she details conditions under which these individuals were born and raised.

It is a powerful book with a deep seated message that we aren't doing enough to treat inmates and are spending huge amounts of money on failed polices. The system needs to be examined and rebuilt; continuing this failed policy will only lead to further problems down the road.
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7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Inside Rikers Goes Inside the Heart, August 1, 2001
There may be criticisms of this book, the main one being that the author is an upper middle class white woman who cannot possibly understand or really appreciate or have anything useful to say that is not self-promoting on the underlying reality of the prison system and the people who populate it. But those who dismiss her and this book on these bases would be doing an injustice to these very people she is writing about.

Ms. Wynn is writing from a given perspective. And it is true that this perspective is not from that of the lives of the people she is writing about. But that is exactly what makes the book so powerful and so valuable. Until now, the prison population has been viewed as "them" or the "other." Most books describing the "system" have been written by former prisoners. But Ms. Wynn, writing as a "typical white liberal person," brings this foreign world (for most of us) into very sharp and disturbing focus.

People who read this book will come away understanding so much more about the prison system in the United States than they knew before. They will find that it is indeed a billion dollar industry, that in the short run it is a bureaucratic, shallow solution to a very deep problem. But the most important and profound insight to be gained is not what prison does to people, or how big an industry it has become, but rather how it is that a society that purports to be so advanced and so humanistic can have created such a living hell for so many millions of people who never really had a chance to begin with. Read this book.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Great read!, November 2, 2011
This review is from: Inside Rikers: Stories from the World's Largest Penal Colony (Paperback)
The author of this book was my professor last year and all i have to say is i really liked her book and she is a great professor. It can be a bit depressing in some chapters but a great point of view and understanding of these individuals.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Very insightful, February 19, 2008
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SD (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
Many of us never give thought to Rikers Island. Most of us do not realize it is the world's largest penal colony.

This book is incredible because it opens your eyes to social situations and stories you never thought possible. After reading the book you can't help but question our policies on criminals and how it only creates new ones.

The stories in the book are very real, and very interesting to read. In no time will you find yourself at the end of it.
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Inside Rikers: Stories from the World's Largest Penal Colony
Inside Rikers: Stories from the World's Largest Penal Colony by Jennifer Wynn (Paperback - July 24, 2002)
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