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cbabe

(5,800 posts)
1. A couple of oldies for comfort: Penny/Grey Wolf, Proof of Life/Jance, and
Sun Oct 26, 2025, 12:01 PM
Yesterday

Shattered/Dick Francis.

Side note on the wonder and power of books:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/a-smuggled-book-changed-his-life-now-he-s-built-500-prison-libraries/ar-AA1P7h97

A smuggled book changed his life. Now he’s built 500 prison libraries.

Story by Maggie Penman

Reginald Dwayne Betts carjacked a man who was asleep in his car in a parking lot in Fairfax County, Virginia. Betts, who was 16 at the time, was tried as an adult and spent nearly a decade in state prison, much of that time in solitary confinement.

Books weren’t allowed in “the hole.” But the men in the prison devised a pulley system using torn sheets and pillowcases to pass books from the general population to people in solitary.

“Imagine yourself as a teenager, 17 years old, in solitary confinement, and you’re just calling out, ‘Yo, somebody send me a book,’” Betts said. “Somebody sent me Dudley Randall’s ‘The Black Poets,’ and it radically changed my life.”

Betts started writing every day and reading anything he could get his hands on. Books transformed him, he says, revealing that other ways of living were possible.

When Betts got out, he earned his bachelor’s degree, then a law degree from Yale Law School. He became a poet and an advocate for prison reform, as well as a MacArthur “genius grant” recipient for his work with his nonprofit Freedom Reads, which installs libraries in prisons across the country.



In August, Freedom Reads opened its 500th library at the York Correctional Institution, Connecticut’s prison for women. Betts read from “Doggerel,” and all the women who attended received a copy, lining up for him to sign it. One of the inmates decorated the wall with a mural celebrating the milestone and shared the organization’s slogan: Freedom begins with a book.

//


Donate link

https://freedomreads.org/

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