Paranoia & Heartbreak

Fifteen Years in a Juvenile Facility

Paperback - $19.95 $14.96 Save $4.99 (25%)
Add to cart

Product Details

ISBN-10 1-58322-877-2
ISBN-13 978-1-58322-877-7
Publication Date Jul 2009
Nb of pages 352
Dimensions 6 x 9 in.

Description

For fifteen years, Jerome Gold worked as a rehabilitation counselor in a prison for juveniles in Washington state. Throughout his time there, he kept a journal of his experiences with youths who had been incarcerated for murder, kidnap, assault, rape and other sex offenses, auto theft, burglary, and selling drugs. What started as a journal designed to relieve stress turned into the evocation of one man's nuanced perspective on a unique group of young people. Paranoia & Heartbreak tells Gold’s personal story of coming to terms with people who have crossed over to the other side of their own humanity. Writing from ample experience and with unflinching compassion, Gold brings the reader to see these "deviants"—and through them, in some slanted way, our whole society, with an unexpected intensity.


Additional Materials

Jerome Gold talks about Paranoia and Heartbreak with Jennifer Kemp of Between the Covers, KBOO-FM in Portland.

Reviews

Press Reviews

Seattle Times
I ask myself, as I always do, "Would I read this if it wasn't a review book? Why?". . . Yes, because it’s real. Yes, because this is the world and the time in which we live. Yes, because Jerome Gold
...more


Kitsap Sun
I'd suggest that this nonfiction work by Seattle author Jerome Gold, subtitled "Fifteen Years in a Juvenile Facility," should be read by every adult living in the state of Washington. Something very bad is happening to too many of our children, and we need to know about it.



Experts

Paranoia & Heartbreak digs deeper—Jerry Gold mines the gold of these kids' emotions, exposes the broken system, shares the kids' grief and pain and hurt and loves. He doesn't judge these wards of the state, he understands them, he takes their voiceless lives and makes them palpable.
-Jimmy Santiago Baca

A powerful and very tender-hearted book without a soupçon of sentimentality. Unforgettable!
-Russell Banks

This book, although superbly written, is not for the faint of heart. . . It may, however, strike a chord with older teens involved with or interested in gang activity, domestic abuse, or criminal behavior.
-Judith Brink-Dresher