Amazon.com Most people know it's easier to get into prison than it is to get out. But for a journalist, just getting into Sing Sing, New York's notorious maximum-security prison, isn't easy. In fact, Ted Conover was so stymied by official channels that he took the only way in--other than crime--and became a New York State corrections officer: "I wanted to hear the voices one truly never hears, the voices of guards--those on the front lines of our prison policies, the society's proxies." Newjack is Conover's account of nearly a year at ground zero of the criminal justice system. What it reveals is a mix of the obvious and the absurd, with hypocrisies not unexpected considering that the land of the free shares with Russia the distinction of having the world's largest prison population. As of December 1999, it was projected that the number of people incarcerated in the United States would reach 2 million in 2000. This is the world Conover enters when he, along with other new recruits, undergoes seven weeks of pseudomilitary preparation at the Albany Training Academy. Then it's off to Sing Sing for the daily grind of prison life. Conover correctly and vividly captures the essence of that life, its tedium interspersed with the adrenaline rush of an "incident" and the edge of fear that accompanies every action. He also details how the guards experience their own feelings of confinement, often at the hands of the inmates: A consequence of putting men in cells and controlling their movements is that they can do almost nothing for themselves. For their various needs they are dependent on one person, their gallery officer. Instead of feeling like a big, tough guard, the gallery officer at the end of the day often feels like a waiter serving a hundred tables or like the mother of a nightmarishly large brood of sullen, dangerous, and demanding children. When grown men are infantilized, most don't take to it too nicely. And not taking to it nicely often involves violence. Indeed, the constant potential for violence on any scale makes even humdrum assignments dangerous. It's astonishing that more doesn't happen, given that the majority of the 1,800 inmates have been convicted of violent felonies: murder, manslaughter, rape, robbery, assault, kidnapping, burglary, arson. But beneath the simmering rage rests an unexpected sensitivity that Conover captures brilliantly. After encountering a Hispanic inmate with a tattoo of a heartbreaking passage from The Diary of Anne Frank on his back, he writes: "It was easier to stay incurious as an officer. Under the inmates' surface bluster, their cruelty and selfishness, was almost always something ineffably sad." Ultimately, the emphasis of Conover's work is on the toll prison exacts--most immediately on the jailed and their jailers, but also on a society that puts both there in increasing numbers. --Gwen Bloomsburg From Publishers Weekly In books like Rolling Nowhere (about hoboes) and Coyotes (about illegal aliens), Conover distinguished himself with brave, empathetic reporting. This riveting book goes further. Stymied by both the union and prison brass in his effort to report on correctional officers, Conover instead applied for a job, and spent nearly a year in the system, mostly at Sing Sing, the storied prison in the New York City suburbs. Fascinated and fearful, the author in training grasps some troubling truths: "we rule with the inmates' consent," says one instructor, while another acknowledges that "rehabilitation is not our job." As a Sing Sing "newjack" (or new guard), Conover learns the folly of going by the book; the best officers recognize "the inevitability of a kind of relationship" with inmates. Whether working the gallery, the mess hall or transportation detail, the job is both a personal and moral challenge: at the isolation unit ("the Box"), Conover begins to write up his first "use of force" incident when a fellow officer waves him away. He steps back to offer a history of the prison, the "hopelessly compromised" work of prison staff and the unspoken idealism he senses in fellow guards. Stressed by his double life and the demands of the job, caught between the warring impulses of anthropological inquiry and "the incuriosity that made the job easier," Conover struggles but nevertheless captures scenes of horror and grace. With its nuanced portraits of officers and inmates, the book never preaches, yet it conveys that we ignore our prisons--an explosive (and expensive) microcosm of race and class tensions--at our collective peril. Agent, Kathy Robbins. First serial to the New Yorker. (May) Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. See all Editorial Reviews
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这本小说彻底颠覆了我对传统叙事结构的认知。它的章节划分和时间线处理得极其跳跃和碎片化,初读时会有些许迷惘,仿佛置身于一个巨大的万花筒前,需要不断地转动才能捕捉到完整的画面。然而,一旦你适应了这种独特的节奏,就会发现这种“不连贯性”恰恰是作者表达主题的最佳方式——它完美模拟了记忆的非线性、信息爆炸时代的碎片化体验。作者似乎并不满足于讲一个故事,他更想探讨的是“故事是如何被构建和被遗忘的”。我特别留意到那些看似无关紧要的细节,它们在后续章节中以一种近乎闪回的方式重新出现,串联起整个宏大的图景。这种阅读体验非常耗费心神,需要读者全神贯注地去拼凑那些散落的线索,但当最终拼图完成时,那种豁然开朗的成就感是无与伦比的。它更像是一部需要被“解码”的作品,而不是被动接受的读物,对喜欢挑战智力极限的读者来说,绝对是一场酣畅淋漓的智力探险。
评分如果用一个词来形容这本书的基调,那一定是“冷峻的诗意”。它的语言风格介于冷硬的纪实和浪漫的抒情之间游走,形成了一种奇异的张力。作者似乎对描述环境有着一种近乎偏执的追求,无论是高耸入云的玻璃幕墙,还是弥漫着潮湿气味的地下通道,都被描绘得栩栩如生,带着一种冰冷而疏离的美感。然而,在这种冰冷的表象之下,又潜藏着对人类情感最深沉的关怀。我能感受到文字背后那股强大的、近乎悲悯的情绪洪流,它没有直接宣泄,而是通过对环境和人物动作的精妙观察来侧面烘托。特别是那些关于“身份迷失”和“技术异化”的段落,读起来让人不寒而栗,因为它描绘的未来图景,似乎就在我们触手可及的当下。这本书迫使我停下来,重新审视我们与周围世界的互动方式,它不仅仅是文学作品,更像是一份犀利而优美的时代诊断书。
评分坦白讲,我一开始以为这会是一本比较沉闷的题材,但很快我就被作者的叙事野心所折服。这本书的格局非常宏大,它似乎试图在一个相对有限的篇幅内,勾勒出一个跨越数十年、涉及多个社会阶层的复杂生态系统。作者没有回避任何一个阴暗的角落,对于权力结构、利益纠葛的处理,显示出惊人的洞察力和勇气。它的叙事视野极为开阔,仿佛从上帝视角俯瞰众生,但又能在关键时刻聚焦到某个小人物身上,捕捉到他们命运中的微小转折。这种在宏大叙事与微观细节之间自由切换的能力,是很多作家穷尽一生也难以企及的。读完后,我感到头脑中充满了新的框架和新的思考角度,它没有给出简单的答案,但却提供了一套极其有力的分析工具,让我对现实世界的运作机制有了更深层次的理解,这才是真正优秀的作品所能赋予读者的宝贵财富。
评分这本书的对话设计堪称教科书级别的典范。角色之间的交流充满了潜台词和未尽之意,你很少能从他们口中听到直白的陈述。每一次看似随意的寒暄,都像是在进行一场高风险的心理博弈,充满了试探、伪装和偶尔的致命性坦诚。我非常喜欢作者如何利用对话的停顿和省略来构建紧张感,有时候,角色之间沉默的时间比他们实际说话的内容更具信息量。跟随这些对话,我仿佛成了一名秘密监听者,努力去解析那些隐藏在礼貌措辞之下的真实意图。这种处理方式使得阅读过程充满了悬念和互动性,读者必须调动所有的共情能力和逻辑分析能力才能跟上角色的思维跳跃。它不像是一部被动阅读的小说,而更像是一场需要读者积极参与的、充满微妙暗语的剧本,其节奏感和韵律感简直可以与顶级的舞台剧相媲美。
评分这本书的叙事节奏像是一部精心编排的交响乐,每一个音符的落下都精准无误地推着故事向前。我尤其欣赏作者在人物塑造上的细腻手法,那些活在纸页上的角色,他们的挣扎、他们的胜利,都带着一种令人信服的真实感。比如主角在面对道德困境时的那种摇摆不定,并非简单的善恶二元对立,而是夹杂着人性的复杂和环境的压迫,让人忍不住代入思考。我跟随着主人公的视角,穿梭于光怪陆离的城市边缘和那些不为人知的权力暗流之中,每一次转折都出乎意料却又合乎情理。它不像有些小说那样急于抛出高潮,而是耐心地铺陈,让情绪层层累积,直到某个瞬间,所有的线索猛地收紧,爆发出震撼人心的力量。读完之后,那种回味无穷的感觉,就像是品尝了一杯后劲悠长的威士忌,初尝平淡,后劲却直冲脑门,久久不能散去。这本书的文字本身就具有一种雕塑感,精准地勾勒出场景的轮廓和人物的内在纹理,绝非泛泛之作。
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