Saturday, 27 June 2009

In Prison


I once spent a week in a prison. All in the interests of scholarship, of course. At university, I studied penology, and as part of my course, I attended an open prison for a week. It was a memorable time. Since then, I’ve managed to keep out of jail, but this last week I went back inside.

The journalist (and fashion blogger) Jane Gallagher is someone I’ve mentioned before. She is a busy and talented person, and among her many activities, she is writer in residence at a prison in the north of England. When she invited me to talk to a group of prisoners with an interest in creative writing, I was happy to go along.

The prison is ‘category B’ and this means that those inside have generally committed much more serious crimes than those I met at the open prison all those years ago. But this group, although it included a couple of convicted murderers, and others who have done terrible things, was lively and engaging (and, if the samples of work I saw are anything to go by, not short of talent, however raw it might be at present.)

I enjoyed the visit a good deal, and was impressed both by the work that Jane does with the men, and by the seriousness of their interest in a wide range of forms of writing. The experience of the locking and unlocking of countless doors, and the sound of footsteps echoing along endless corridors, will stay with me for a long time. And if, one day, the germ of an idea of a story set in closed prison comes to me, I’ll know where it came from.

6 comments:

  1. You might be interested in this item about the Honeytones group playing for inmates at Channing Woods and Dartmoor Prisons. Our youngest Jacob is the lead singer.
    http://www.thisisnorthdevon.co.uk/southmolton/Musicians-learning-disabilities-captive-audience/article-1084372-detail/article.html

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  2. I am glad they let you out again! We are waiting for that fourth Daniel Kind-novel, you know :)

    It must be good research for a crime writer to visit prisons. Apart from Kilmainham I have never tried it.

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  3. Thank you for writing about your visit Martin - your visit was a talking point for days. The guys were very interested in your ideas for short stories and the process of editing.

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  4. Thanks again for the invitation, Jane.

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  5. Hi Dorte. One thing about prison, I suppose, is that you have quite a lot of time to think out your story-lines...but on the whole I much prefer it outside!

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  6. Thanks for the link, Uriah. I do think these initiatives with prisons are a Very Good Thing.

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