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Boy With a Knife

A Story of Murder, Remorse, and a Prisoner's Fight for Justice

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Nearly a quarter of a million youth are tried, sentenced, or imprisoned as adults every year across the United States. On any given day, ten thousand youth are detained or incarcerated in adult jails and prisons.

Putting a human face to these sobering statistics, Boy With A Knife tells the story of Karter Kane Reed, who, at the age of sixteen, was sentenced to life in an adult prison for a murder he committed in 1993 in a high school classroom. Twenty years later, in 2013, he became one of the few men in Massachusetts to sue the Parole Board and win his freedom.

The emotional and devastating narrative takes us step by step through Karter's crime, trial, punishment, and survival in prison, as well as his readjustment into regular society. In addition to being a powerful portrayal of one boy trying to come to terms with the consequences of his tragic actions, Boy With A Knife is also a searing critique of the practice of sentencing youth to adult prisons, providing a wake-up call on how we must change the laws in this country that allow children to be sentenced as adults.

Jean Trounstine is the author of the highly praised Shakespeare Behind Bars: The Power of Drama in Women's Prison (St. Martin's) about her decade directing plays and teaching at Framingham Women's Prison in Massachusetts. She has written numerous articles on prison issues for publications including Boston magazine, the Boston Globe, Working Woman magazine, the Women's Review of Books, and Truthout, and has been the subject of many articles, radio broadcasts (NPR, The Connection), and TV shows (the Today Show).

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    • Library Journal

      June 15, 2016

      This riveting account of youthful crime and punishment evolves into an unlikely success story. In 1993, 16-year-old Karter Kane Reed killed a student in a Massachusetts high school and was sentenced to life in an adult prison. Details of his offense, background, and 20-year flow through the criminal justice system, including a prison stint with his own father, are recounted chronologically. A stern critique of the transfer process, whereby juvenile offenders are treated as adults, underlies the narrative. Trounstine, a teacher and writer (Shakespeare Behind Bars), argues that the "superpredator" idea of radical criminality spawned in the 1990s encouraged the spread of this practice, which endangers young offenders and hampers rehabilitation without making society safer. The book relies on letters between Trounstine and Reed as well as court information and personal encounters. Relevant research findings, legal decisions, and statistics skillfully support the case study materials. Reed's own moving epilog and status update concludes the well-crafted volume. Like Damien Echols's Life After Death, this book will appeal to readers drawn to the drama and complexity of the criminal justice system. VERDICT A timely examination of American juvenile justice as exemplified in the "scared straight" story of one youth's survival and redemption.--Antoinette Brinkman, formerly with Southwest Indiana Mental Health Ctr. Lib., Evansville

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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