James Kilgore: 5 books

Book cover of Understanding Mass Incarceration

Understanding Mass Incarceration

A People's Guide to the Key Civil Rights Struggle of Our Time

by James Kilgore
Language: English
Release Date: August 11, 2015

We all know that orange is the new black and mass incarceration is the new Jim Crow, but how much do we actually know about the structure, goals, and impact of our criminal justice system? Understanding Mass Incarceration offers the first comprehensive overview of the incarceration apparatus put in...
Book cover of We Are All Zimbabweans Now
by James Kilgore
Language: English
Release Date: September 12, 2011

We Are All Zimbabweans Now is a political thriller set in Zimbabwe in the hopeful, early days of Robert Mugabe’s rise to power in the late 1980s. When Ben Dabney, a Wisconsin graduate student, arrives in the country, he is enamored with Mugabe and the promises of his government’s model of racial...
Book cover of Prudence Couldn't Swim
by James Kilgore
Language: English
Release Date: June 1, 2012

Set in Oakland, California, white ex-convict Cal Winter returns home one day to find his gorgeous, young, black wife, Prudence, drowned in the swimming pool. Prudence couldn’t swim, and Cal concludes she didn’t go in the water willingly. Though theirs was a marriage of convenience, he takes the...
Book cover of Freedom Never Rests
by James Kilgore
Language: English
Release Date: February 1, 2012

Lying bare the political and personal intricacies of community struggles, this extraordinary story portrays the historical roots of the service delivery revolts that have swept South Africa in recent years. This novel centers around an engaging and tragic couple: an unemployed ex-shop steward and...
Book cover of In/visible War

In/visible War

The Culture of War in Twenty-first-Century America

by Nina Berman, Nina Berman, David Campbell
Language: English
Release Date: June 14, 2017

In/Visible War addresses a paradox of twenty-first century American warfare. The contemporary visual American experience of war is ubiquitous, and yet war is simultaneously invisible or absent; we lack a lived sense that “America” is at war. This paradox of in/visibility concerns the gap between...
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