
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 4 reviews on

NYT EDITOR'S CHOICE - Peabody Award finalist - National Headliner Award winner - WASHINGTON POST BEST NONFICTION OF 2023 - Shortlisted for the 2024 Chicago Review of Books Award - FROM THE CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED AUTHOR OF HIGH-RISERS comes a groundbreaking and honest investigation into the crisis of the American criminal justice system-through the lens of parole. Perfect for fans of Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow and Bryan Stevenson's Just Mercy
"Correction ranks among the very best books on life inside and outside of prison I have ever read." ―Matthew Desmond, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Evicted
**A Next Big Idea Club must-read title for November 2023**
"[Austen] explains our world, its codes of conduct and how we adapt, and sometimes unravel, as we try to survive."-The New York Times "A critical contribution to discussions of how to reform American criminal justice, illuminating how we might change the process of giving people second chances and re-envision the very purpose of our carceral system." -The Washington Post "Austen provides a thoughtful and clarifying look at parole and its often fraught place in the arc of the criminal justice system in the U.S." ―Booklist, starred review "Ben Austen... returns with Correction a tight (less than 300-page) history of U.S. prisons and penance, alongside tales of two men and their endless paths. A damning act of intense reporting leading to unsettled questions: Do we believe in atonement? If so, what does it look like? And how serious can we be when a slight shift in courtroom momentum condemns a life? You'll hear a lot about this one." ―The Chicago Tribune