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Reviews for The Sun Does Shine

by Anthony Ray Hinton with Lara Love Hardin

Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* In 2015, Hinton was released after serving nearly 30 years half of his life on Alabama's death row for crimes he didn't commit. His memoir, collaboratively written with Hardin, is a troubling, moving, and ultimately exalting journey through the decades Hinton lived under the threat of death while an unjust system that refused to acknowledge mistakes failed him repeatedly. After barely speaking during his first years on the row, Hinton's natural friendliness and compassion compelled him to connect with his fellow inmates and start a book club. As he experienced the executions of these new friends, Hinton learned to rely on his imagination which took him from his five-by-seven cell to places he'd never been and never take for granted the unconditional love of his mother and best friend, who never missed a visiting day. Hope eventually appeared in the form of God's best lawyer, Bryan Stevenson, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative and author of Just Mercy (2014). It would take Stevenson and his team, working tirelessly, another 15 years to win Hinton back his freedom. Even more powerful than the crushing terror of serving a death sentence while innocent are Hinton's refusal to be diminished by it and his unwavering commitment to forgiveness. Lighting unfathomable places, Hinton's gripping story asks readers to do the same. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: With a huge print run, Hinton's incredible story and social-justice star Stevenson, who wrote the foreword, will draw major attention.--Bostrom, Annie Copyright 2018 Booklist


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

In 1985, Hinton was charged with capital murder for the killing of two store owners. Despite evidence that he had not committed the crimes, he was found guilty and sentenced to Alabama's death row, where he spent the next 30 years. This book, which is not for the faint of heart, follows two parallel paths. First, it details the legal wrangling involved in Hinton's case up to the intervention of civil rights attorney Bryan Stevenson (author of Just Mercy, who wrote the foreword for this book) and Hinton's release in 2015. Second, it gives a graphic account of life on death row, this being the most powerful part of the text. We learn about the interaction between the condemned and the guards, the cries for mercy, and finally the pungent smell of burning flesh after an execution. How could Hinton find any solace from this? Yet he does. In his closing remarks, he claims to have found life and freedom on death row, a place where the sun does shine. A cryptic remark indeed. -VERDICT A must for anyone involved in criminal justice. Suggested reading for anyone interested in learning more about death row and its horrors. [See Prepub Alert, 10/9/17.]-Frances O. Sandiford, formerly with Green Haven Correctional Facility Lib., -Stormville, NY © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

An urgent, emotional memoir from one of the longest-serving condemned death row inmates to be found innocent in America.One night in July 1985, Hinton was locked in a secure warehouse of a supermarket for his overnight shift when, 15 miles away, the assistant manager of a local restaurant was kidnapped at gunpoint, robbed, and shot in the head. Less than a week later, police showed up at Hinton's house to arrest him for that crime and the murders of two other local Alabama restaurant managers. Hinton was black, 29, living at home with his mother, and innocent of all charges. At his trial, his lawyer presented an incompetent defense that failed to refute the state's distorted evidence and several witnesses' false claims. Hinton was found guilty of two counts of capital murder and sentenced to death by electric chair. For the next three decades, he maintained his innocence in solitary confinement on Alabama's death row, where he watched more than 50 men led past his cell to the execution chamber just 30 feet away. The truth of Hinton's innocence and his unshakable faith in God helped him cope with prison life and several failed repeal attempts until Bryan Stevenson, founder and executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative, eventually took up his case and brought it all the way to the Supreme Court. After nearly 30 years, all charges against Hinton were dropped, and he was released from prison in 2015. Woven into vivid descriptions of life behind bars are flashbacks to the author's childhood, court transcripts, police documents, news clippings, and correspondence that reveal the roles racism, poverty, and fear played in creating a deeply biased criminal justice system that punishes the poor and people of color. Stevenson (Just Mercy, 2014) provides a powerful foreword.A heart-wrenching yet ultimately hopeful story about truth, justice, and the need for criminal justice reform. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

In 1985, Hinton was arrested for murder, found guilty, and sentenced to death by electric chair in Alabama. However, Hinton was working in a locked warehouse at the time of the shooting. This audiobook tells the tale of Hinton's early life, the trial, and the next 30 years he spent on death row. The most remarkable aspect of Hinton was and is his ability to see happiness in every situation. He even told his prosecutor that he loved him after the trial. Civil rights attorney Bryan Stevenson (Just Mercy) learned of the case years later and helped to exonerate Hinton in 2015. A foreword voiced by Stevenson brings the listener into Hinton's world immediately. Narrator Kevin R. Free performs the book perfectly as he reads Hinton's powerful tale. VERDICT Any person who follows the Innocence Project in the news and those who watched Making a Murderer on Netflix will be amazed at Hinton's perseverance throughout his incarceration and years on death row. ["A must for anyone involved in criminal justice. Suggested reading for anyone interested in learning more about death row and its horrors": LJ 4/1/18 starred review of the St. Martin's hc.]--Jason L. Steagall, formerly with Gateway Technical Coll. Lib., Elkhorn, WI © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

In this intense memoir, Hinton recounts his three-decade nightmare: awaiting execution for crimes he didn¿t commit. In 1985, Hinton, then 29, was charged with a series of violent robberies as well as the murders of two restaurant managers in Birmingham, Ala. Hinton passed a polygraph test and was in a locked warehouse during one robbery, but that didn¿t prevent an all-white jury from finding him guilty after only two hours (the death penalty recommendation took another 45 minutes). Hinton here provides a convincing description of continued segregation and injustice in the deep South that cages the underclass as effectively as prison walls. His depictions of prison life are wrenching, as when he recalls the 1987 electric chair execution of Wayne Ritter and how the smell of Ritter¿s burning flesh ¿burned my nose and stung my throat.¿ Forced to hone his mind to withstand overwhelming isolation, Hinton read voraciously and studied his case. With the unwavering support of his mother and his best friend, Hinton created a fulfilling life for himself, which included running a book club for death row inmates. After many years, his dogged pursuit of justice led civil rights attorney Bryan Stephenson to adopt his cause. Hinton was freed from prison in 2015, and now works as a motivational speaker. Hinton¿s life is one of inspiration, which he wonderfully relays here in bitingly honest prose. (Mar.)

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