The Tragedy of True Crime
Four Guilty Men and the Stories That Define Us
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3 Months Free
Buy Now for £14.37
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Narrated by:
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Will Damron
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By:
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John J. Lennon
In 2001, John J. Lennon killed a man on a Brooklyn Street. Now he’s a journalist, working from behind bars, trying to make sense of it all.
The Tragedy of True Crime is a first-person journalistic account of the lives of four men who have killed, written by a man who has killed. Lennon entered the New York prison system with a sentence of 28 years to life but after he stepped into a writing workshop at Attica Correctional Facility, his whole life changed. Reporting from the cell block and the prison yard, Lennon challenges our obsession with true crime by telling the full life stories of men now serving time for the lives they took.
These men have completely different backgrounds — Robert Chambers, a preppy Manhattanite turned true crime celebrity; Milton E. Jones, a seventeen-year-old coaxed from burglary into something far darker; and Michael Shane Hale, a gay man caught in a crime of passion — and all are searching to find meaning and redemption behind bars. Lennon’s reporting is intertwined with his own story, from a young man seduced by the infamous gangster culture of New York City to a celebrated prison journalist. The same desire echoes throughout the lives of these four men: to become more than murderers.
A first-of-its-kind book of immersive prison journalism, The Tragedy of True Crime poses fundamental questions about the stories we tell and who gets to tell them. What essential truth do we lose when we don’t consider all that comes before an act of unthinkable violence? And what happens to the convicted after the cell gate locks?
A Macmillan Audio production from Celadon Books
Editorial Review
Insightfully honest
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The Tragedy of True Crime by John J. Lennon is powerful because it is written by someone in prison who understands the system from the inside. Rather than treating crime as entertainment, Lennon looks at the impact of true crime stories on victims, perpetrators, families, and the public.
What I appreciated most was the humanity in it. He never excuses terrible crimes, but he reminds us that there are still human beings behind them. Real people with histories, trauma, circumstances, and the potential for something different.
That has certainly been my experience too, working within the criminal justice system. The people who commit crimes are so often people who have experienced their own trauma, lack of education, lack of opportunity, and a system that has failed them long before they failed others.
It made me think about how easily people can become labels or headlines, and how punishment on its own rarely creates real change. Rather than turning crime into entertainment or simply throwing away the key, perhaps we should be asking harder questions about how we are failing people in our society in the first place.
When we stop seeing people as monsters and start seeing them as human, different possibilities begin to open up.
We are failing our society
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