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BENDING THE ARC by Keeda Haynes Kirkus Star

BENDING THE ARC

My Journey From Prison to Politics

by Keeda Haynes

Pub Date: Nov. 16th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-5416-4630-8
Publisher: Seal Press

A Black, female former public defender and congressional candidate reflects on her experiences navigating the racist, sexist justice system that incarcerated her “for a crime I did not commit.”

Haynes was raised in Franklin, Tennessee, a town that, during her childhood, still celebrated its Confederate past. “My high school mascot,” she writes, “was the Franklin Rebel, a cartoon of a smug Confederate soldier.” Surrounded by multiple generations of loving family, Haynes grew up hardworking, ambitious, and well-loved. Through a combination of loans and retail jobs, she paid her way through college, where she majored in criminal psychology. While balancing work and education, Haynes met C, a charming man who lived in Memphis and whose attention Haynes found flattering. In a purported effort to help her pay her bills, C asked her if she would sign for a series of packages associated with his company, Beepers Plus. As a bonus, he offered her $50 for each one she accepted. Thinking that the packages contained only items associated with C’s business, Haynes accepted. Later, Haynes discovered that the seemingly innocuous packages were filled with marijuana, which she learned only when the police accused her of conspiring with C to sell drugs. Despite going to trial and pleading innocent, Haynes was sentenced to seven years in prison. This experience would inform the rest of her life. “I was one person—young, female, and Black—against a much larger, much stronger force, whose intentions, it seemed, were not to serve and protect but to intimidate and harass,” she writes. “To fit me into whatever narrative they had dreamed up and then punish me accordingly.” The author’s story is both inspiring and heartbreaking, and her voice is simultaneously impassioned and informed. Haynes is adept at using her personal experience to illustrate general truths about the flaws in the criminal justice system as well as specific avenues for reform.

A gripping, passionate memoir about a wrongly incarcerated Black woman's drive for judicial reform.