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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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English
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RIKERS

Reuven Blau Graham Rayman

An Oral History

A gritty behind the scenes look into a secret world behind bars where a history of violence and death hangs in the air, where the city leaders mounted a grand experiment and watched it fail miserable, a remote place where society warehoused its problems and pretended they didn't exist, a machine into which we fed generations of poor, largely black and Hispanic folks to perpetuate the institution without truly giving them a way out or up.
A deeply reported work by two New York City journalists. Rayman and Blau share first hand accounts from wardens, medical staff, and current and former inmates of Rikers Island, forming a tableau of what day-to-day life is like inside not just for the inmates, but also everybody who enters the walls. As calls to close jails and reduce the number of incarcerated people grow louder, with the movement to close this entire island complex itself at the forefront, RIKERS is a resounding lesson about the human consequences of the incarceration industry.

These are visceral stories of despair, brutality, resilience, humor, and hope, told by the people who were marooned on the island over the course of decades. The subjects each tell the story of their time at Rikers, from their first day on the island onwards, and they speak of experiences from the 1970s and '80s to the present day.

These oral stories are also entertaining and attention-grabbing how the first loaded gun was smuggled into Rikers, how one guy escaped three times three different ways, the pork and beans lunch with real pigtails including hair in it, the red juice that stained the floor and made a great hair dye, how to make a deadly knife out of a ceiling light, why female correction officers sometimes get involved with inmates, the Rikers bus to nowhere, etc. People are going to want to read these stories for the stories themselves to laugh, or gasp or be titillated or appalled.

Graham Rayman covers criminal justice and policing for the New York Daily News. He has won multiple journalism prizes over his thirty-year career. He has previously worked at New York Newsday, Newsday, and the Village Voice. He is also the author of The NYPD Tapes.
Reuven Blau is a senior reporter at The City. He has previously worked at the New York Daily News, the New York Post, and the Chief-Leader. He is known as the dean of Rikers reporters.
Both Reuven and Graham spent many years covering Rikers in various ways, and have been developing sources and knowledge about the subject for just as long. They have reached into the past to pluck out these personal and compelling stories that not only shock or entertain or draw concern from the reader, but also tell the larger story: how, when given an opportunity to change a miserable history in penology, the government instead perpetuated it.
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Published 2023-01-17 by Random House

Comments

A multivocal tour of hell on Earth...If there were ever an argument for prison reform, it's in these pages.

I read Rikers like a wildly disturbing novel too mesmerizing to put down. As a journalist, I'm awed that such a book is even possible. How could anyone capture this detailed a view from inside the beast? Somehow, Rayman and Blau pulled it off. This is one of the most impressive pieces of journalism I've ever read.

In Rikers, Graham Rayman and Reuven Blau shatter a century-old code of silence by skillfully amplifying the words of the people who have been there - those who have been detained in horrific conditions, those who work there in desperate circumstances, and those responsible for an institution where it costs more than half a million dollars a year to incarcerate one person. This mesmerizing and gut-wrenching book shows the brutal realities that tens of thousands of people have been forced to navigate, and survive, in America's most notorious jail.

Rikers is a profound examination of a storied facility. It is simply a must-read for anyone interested in ending mass incarceration or the history of prisons and jails. The stories within highlight the sheer cruelty of the corrections system, the resounding hope of the people trapped within, and the possibilities of something altogether new and better. A stunning work.