Dancing to the Concertina's Tune
A Prison Teacher's Memoir
Jan Walker


Northeastern University Press
University Press of New England

2004 • 192 pp. 6 x 9"
Memoir / Criminal Justice

$19.95 Paper, 1-55553-601-8


Checkout

“While she is informing her readers of what it is like to teach violent felons in deep-security prisons, she is also informing them of what life is like for those prisoners. Her book is honest and free of any sort of sentimentality. She wants us to see the humanity of the prisoners, but she does not want us to forget why they are behind bars. Her language is open and accessible.” Statesman Journal

An honest and compassionate account of a teacher’s experiences behind bars.

America's soaring prison population is separated from the outside world by the Concertina, the rigid spirals of razor wire that top the high chain-link fences of state and federal penitentiaries. For nearly two decades, educator Jan Walker crossed this line at medium and maximum correctional facilities to teach adult felons who had committed such crimes as murder, rape, assault, drug-related offenses, and child sexual abuse.

In this beautifully crafted and moving memoir, Walker takes the reader inside the Concertina, offering a window on the unique rhythms of living and working in the isolated and harsh prison environment. She shares her striking experiences as a correctional teacher of innovative parenting and family courses, including a controversial class on how to parent from a distance, and as the coordinator of a pioneering program on personal and social responsibility. In stirring and intimate prose, Walker weaves together the true stories of male and female inmates with reflections on her own life and career to reveal the challenges, rewards, and emotional toll of her work. Through Walker's eyes, one sees her students not as hardened criminals, but as human beings struggling to survive behind bars, to reconsider their choices and behavior, to learn new skills, and to reconnect with their children. Walker's profound commitment to helping offenders rebuild their lives, as well as to preparing them for the return home to their families and communities, is evident as she relates how she coped with political and philosophical turmoil in the prison system, confrontational attitude from both inmates and corrections officers, moments of despair and doubt, and encounters with tough-on-crime taxpayers who berated her for wasting public monies to teach "scumbags, street rats, human garbage."

At a time when budget cuts threaten programs such as those taught by Walker, these dramatic stories show that education does make a difference in a prisoner's rehabilitation and successful reintegration in society.

“At bottom, the book is about how education can be used as a means toward transformation, and, perhaps, redemption. Walker is steadfast in her argument for education the imprisoned in parenting and family skills.”Washington State Magazine


Jan Walker, a former community college teacher trained in child and family studies, is the author of Parenting from a Distance: Your Rights and Responsibilities, training manuals for corrections educators, and works of fiction. She lives in Gig Harbor, Washington.

“While she is informing her readers of what it is like to teach violent felons in deep-security prisons, she is also informing them of what life is like for those prisoners. Her book is honest and free of any sort of sentimentality. She wants us to see the humanity of the prisoners, but she does not want us to forget why they are behind bars. Her language is open and accessible.” —Statesman Journal








Secure on-line ordering!
or Toll-Free: 800-421-1561
Thu, 7 Feb 2008 16:58:40 -0500