
Citizen Outlaw
One Man's Journey from Gangleader to Peacekeeper
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

September 1, 2019
Inspirational story of a criminal whose self-reform has brought peace both to him and his city. This is the tale of William Juneboy Outlaw III, who long ago began a life of crime on the streets of New Haven, Connecticut--located, Barber (Writer-in-Residence/Wesleyan Univ.) notes, "in the wealthiest state in the country" but whose declining population is marked by plenty of poverty and ethnic division. Had he been born under different circumstances, notes one of the state's crime analysts, Outlaw might have been the CEO of a Fortune 500 company. "As it was," that observer continues, "he took mediocre talent and created a first-class gang that ran half of the city of New Haven. What he accomplished was the equivalent of the Afghan warlords putting together scrubs and taking on the U.S. Army." He was also something of a Robin Hood figure in the poorer sections of town, buying needed supplies and groceries for neighbors and even shoveling sidewalks in winter. Still, Outlaw lived up to his name, controlling the trade in drugs, weapons, and stolen goods. The police caught up with him after he murdered a member of a rival gang, and he was sentenced to an 85-year prison term. He might have turned into a behind-bars crime lord, pulling that long stretch in Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary, "where Whitey Bulger, Al Capone, and John Gotti had served time." After a rocky start, though, Outlaw turned himself around and earned early release. Since returning to New Haven, as Barber closely documents, Outlaw has become a mentor to young people who might otherwise be on the path to prison. He tells one parolee group, in blunt language, that his goal is "to reduce recidivism and keep you guys out of the fucking penitentiary." It seems to have worked: Violent crime has fallen by 70 percent, much of which local authorities attribute to Outlaw's interventions among at-risk people. Of interest to criminal-justice reformers, community workers, and policymakers.
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October 1, 2019
Writer and Yale psychiatry lecturer Barber (Comfortably Numb, 2008) profiles William Juneboy Outlaw in this journalistic and inspiring book. In the late 1980s, teenage Outlaw quickly turned a small New Haven marijuana business into an organized, highly profitable, cocaine-dealing gang known as the Jungle Boys. After he was convicted of murder and sentenced to 85 years, Outlaw at first tried everything he could to keep his business going from the inside. But after a handful of pivotal moments, including a steep reduction in his sentence, he chose to get his education and get out as soon as he could. Upon release, he found his calling as a violence interrupter, working with at-risk kids on the same streets he used to run. Barber could not have chosen a better subject; Outlaw is smart, charismatic, and someone readers will instantly root for. Barber also adeptly describes places, putting readers in locales likely unfamiliar; from abandoned apartments used for dealing to solitary confinement in prison. A must-read especially for those interested in social justice and prison reform.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)
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