The Prisoner's Wife by asha bandele

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: August 2000
  • 240pp
  • Sales Rank: 53,967

Reader Rating: (35 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Intellectual Stimulation" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: August 2000
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 240pp
    • Sales Rank: 53,967

    Synopsis

    Many of us have wondered at the motivations of women who meet and marry men who are in prison for the long term or even life. What motivates them? How do they reconcile their feelings with the man's past actions and with the fact that their married life together will be limited, for the foreseeable future, to occasional, brief visits? Asha Bandele is one such woman; at the age of 25, she fell in love with a man who was serving 20-years-to-life for murder. And yet she married him. In The Prisoner's Wife, she reveals her reasons and shares with the reader the trials, tribulations, and yes, triumphs of a life shared with a man she only seldom sees. In this excerpt, Bandele recalls her very first meeting with her husband, Rashid.

    Library Journal

    This book explains the inexplicable: how a talented young poet from a good family and privileged background could meet, fall in love with, and marry a prisoner serving 20-to-life for murder. As bandele says "I didn't fall in love with a killer. I fell in love with a man committed to the transformation of himself, of the world." They meet when she is among a group of African American activists giving readings at prisons. The prison, she says, "because of its stance against love made me take a stance for love." Her prison visits become personal visits as she and Rashid share stories of their lives and he helps her confront and overcome a history of sexual abuse. Their decision to marry, and thus have conjugal visits, seems offhand but not awry, given their deep emotional intimacy. The author has a poet's fluid skill with language and maintains a lyrical tone throughout, even in the uncertainty following denial of her husband's appeal and bandele's realization that he will be locked up for at least seven more years. For all public libraries.--Janice Dunham, John Jay Coll. Lib., New York Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    asha bandele is also the author of a book of poetry, absence in the palms of my hands. An editor in Essence magazine, she is a frequent spoken-word performer and lecturer on campuses and in communities accross the United States and in Europe. asha lives in Brooklyn, New York.

    Customer Reviews

    Interesting Readby Anonymous

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    April 13, 2009: This book was selected for my April book club meeting by one of the other members. My first thought was this will make for an interesting reading experience. I started reading this book with the mind set of "No way could I ever imagine becoming involved with a convicted felon." It was easy enough to get into but I really started to enjoy the book at the mid way point...the earlier chapters did not really pull me in but as the main characters begin to open up, the story becomes very compelling, very sad at points, but enlightening at others. I still would not become involved with a convicted criminal but this book did open my mind up to lives of the prisoners and the spouses/family members who are drawn into their way of life in order to maintain some manner of contact under a different, restrictive way of life.

    Very Realisticby Anonymous

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    April 26, 2007: This book spoke for a lot of woman that have incarcerated loved ones in jail and how it is on the other side. I related with so many things in this book and it helped me get through my lonely days away from my husband. I highly recommend this book to everyone !!!


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