-
Remarkable . . . A captivating, intimate profile of one
man's stubbornly persistent efforts to convince others of his innocence . . .
Rachlin is a skilled storyteller . . . With understatement and painstaking
reporting, he fully succeeds in his rich, intimate portrait of Grimes.
— Alex Kotlowitz, New York Times Book Review
-
A crisply written page turner . . . Rachlin painstakingly renders Grimes's life behind bars . . . Deploying the same precision with which he documents Grimes's prison life, Rachlin recounts the arduous and complex work to move the wheels of justice . . . Read Ghost of the Innocent Man to follow its twisted path . . . but don't read for the gripping story alone . . . The National Registry of Exonerations calculates that over 18,000 years have been lost by innocent people serving time . . . Shouldn't we be better than this?
— Martha Anne Toll, NPR
-
Intriguing . . . A gripping legal-thriller mystery .
. . This is a story that profoundly elevates good-cause advocacy to greater
heights-to where innocent lives are saved . . . This empathetic book tells the
story of the beginnings of the movement to right a national crisis of wrongful
convictions-and of one of its first victories . . . A fine piece of
investigative journalism.
— Don Oldenburg, USA Today
-
Rachlin vividly describes the anguish that would well
up in Grimes again and again during his twenty-four years behind bars . . . In
Rachlin's skilled hands, Grimes's story triggers indignation but also confers
solace, Grimes [himself] being one of the solacing features.
— Dennis Drabelle, The Washington Post
-
Dramatic and eye-opening . . . A hopeful story . . . By showing us that the specter of wrongful convictions involves flesh-and-blood human beings, Ghost of the Innocent Man confronts us with the cruelest injustices of the criminal justice system, even as it also holds out hope for a more humane future.
— San Francisco Chronicle
-
One of the most powerful aspects of Ghost of the Innocent Man is its portrait of time behind bars--the transfers, delays, and letter-writing campaigns that form the scaffolding of lives in limbo . . . A story so important and infuriating it is hard to look away.
— Claudia Rowe, Seattle Times
-
Ghost of the Innocent Man is nothing less than a masterpiece of investigative reporting and virtuosic writing. It is a book that brilliantly substantiates society's elemental promise to its citizenry-that we not have our freedoms wrongly taken from us. Benjamin Rachlin's book is Greek drama brought into our own times. It will change readers' lives, I think, and inspire them. It's that good.
— Richard Ford
-
Ghost of the Innocent Man is deeply researched and, more importantly, deeply felt. For both reasons and many more, it is a profound meditation on the human condition and a vital contribution to the literature. The endurance and fortitude of Willie Grimes surpass those of any athlete or explorer. The passages in which Christine Mumma assembles lawmen and legislatures of all different creeds to help resolve an urgent national crisis should make us all consider these current times as not just toxic and tragic but filled with the possibility of hope and redemption. In the end, Benjamin Rachlin takes us through the justice system in all its immutability and shows us the light we can wield should we so choose."
—
-
—Jeff Hobbs, author of the New York Times bestseller The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace
—
-
Ghost of the Innocent Man is an honest and critical look at our justice system. . . [and] a meticulously researched book. It is a must-read for every American who cares about justice.
— The Washington Book Review
-
An absorbing true-crime saga . . . Rachlin's debut combines a gripping legal drama with a penetrating exposé of the shoddy investigative and trial standards nationwide . . . His narrative offers a moving evocation of faith under duress.
— Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)
-
Grimes's story is both compelling and enraging, and
his thoughtfulness and persistence propel the story as much as the
determination and passion of the lawyers working to establish the Commission .
. . A sobering account of both a wrongful conviction and the structural
impediments to fixing miscarriages of justice, with a gut punch of a closing
paragraph.
— Kate Sheehan, Library Journal (starred review)
-
An absorbing story . . . In his moving
first book, Rachlin, with confidence and care, relays both the terrifying
personal costs and complex legalities, so dependent on fallible humans, of
wrongful conviction and imprisonment.
— Annie Bostrom, Booklist
-
In this compelling tale of crime and punishment (of the wrong person), Rachlin explores a horrible case of wrongful conviction and ultimate exoneration. Willie Grimes maintained his innocence in his 1988 trial, but was convicted on flimsy evidence and served over 20 years behind bars. By twinning Grimes' story with the establishment of North Carolina's Innocence Inquiry Commission, which was responsible for overturning the conviction, Rachlin enlarges the book's scope, making it not merely a chronicle of a serious miscarriage of justice, but a broader indictment of a flawed system, and the prison industrial complex, that made it possible.
— The National Book Review
-
Ghost of the Innocent Man is plainspoken-frank, yes, but even more potently, unadorned--either when Grimes is speaking or Rachlin is writing . . . The story is clean and tight, emotionally and psychologically expressive and expressionistic, and easily visualized by the mind's eye . . . A fine debut effort.
— Peter Lewis, Barnes & Noble Review