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Redemption of a Murderer - by Louise Stowe-Johns (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- When fifteen-year-old Judy Adams runs away with Alvin Neelley, she entangles herself in a web of lies and criminality.
- Author(s): Louise Stowe-Johns
- 332 Pages
- Biography + Autobiography, Personal Memoirs
Description
About the Book
This book chronicles thirty-eight years of the author's relationship with death-row inmate Judy Neelley
Book Synopsis
When fifteen-year-old Judy Adams runs away with Alvin Neelley, she entangles herself in a web of lies and criminality. After committing two murders Judy has two choices: she can remain with her husband, Alvin, and become a serial killer or turn herself in to the police.
Seven months later she is sent to death row in the women's prison of Alabama. Judy can't understand how she became a murderer and the victim of Alvin, whose physical and psychological brutality reduced Judy to being his puppet. Slowly an idea takes shape. In whatever time she has, can she write to victims and family members of victims to tell them of her remorse? Will they be willing to read and believe what she has written?
This book chronicles thirty-nine years of the author's relationship with Judy in various roles, as chaplain, spiritual director, confidante, grief counselor, and friend.
Review Quotes
"Former prison chaplain, Louise Stowe-Johns, opens us to discovering meaning and grace in the life of one condemned to death. It is revelatory reading for those who are willing to gain insight into the devastating effects of spousal abuse and its coercive control. Her book also is a glaring indictment of a justice system that has failed to address the harm and ramifications of such control, and it raises urgent questions about the morality and efficacy of imprisonment and the death penalty." - Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking
"Redemption of a Murderer is a stunning read about the nature of forgiveness and injustice. Author Louise Stowe-Johns shows us the kidnapped soul of a fifteen-year-old girl who became a lethal puppet in a sadistic monster's crime spree. This story is both an indictment of the patriarchal criminal justice system and an affirmation of the power of humanity." - Lisa St. John, Author of Swallowing Stones
"Compelling reading. I couldn't put it down." - Lenore Walker, Ed.D., Psychologist and Author, The Battered Woman Syndrome