"This book provides a rich, detailed portrait of the lives of those who have been wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death in the United States. The authors skillfully conduct a journey inside the minds of exonerees, allowing readers to see the world from their unique perspectives."
— C. Ronald Huff, University of California, Irvine
"When an innocent man walks off death row, we bask in the happiness that he and his supporters exude, but, as Westervelt and Cook movingly document in this outstanding scholarly treatise, exoneration never ends the despair that follows a wrongful death sentence."
— Robert L. Warden, Northwestern University School of Law
"A wonderful research idea, wonderfully realized. The persons we meet on these pages have suffered the cruelest fate imaginable, and we learn crucial lessons from them about human trauma and human resilience. A rich, thoughtful, important, compelling study."
— Kai Erikson, Professor Emeritus of Sociology and American Studies, Yale University
"Westervelt and Cook have written a well-written, compelling, and detailed qualitative study of the afterlife of death row inmates who have been exonerated by the courts. This study demonstrates the authors' extensive and thorough work, which has paid off with an important study in criminology. Highly recommended."
— Choice
"The nation's first systematic study of the experiences of death-row inmates who are cleared of wrongdoing."
— News & Observer
"The nation's first systematic study of the experiences of death-row inmates who are cleared of wrongdoing."
— News & Observer
"A wonderful research idea, wonderfully realized. The persons we meet on these pages have suffered the cruelest fate imaginable, and we learn crucial lessons from them about human trauma and human resilience. A rich, thoughtful, important, compelling study."
— Kai Erikson, Professor Emeritus of Sociology and American Studies, Yale University
"Westervelt and Cook have written a well-written, compelling, and detailed qualitative study of the afterlife of death row inmates who have been exonerated by the courts. This study demonstrates the authors' extensive and thorough work, which has paid off with an important study in criminology. Highly recommended."
— Choice
"This book provides a rich, detailed portrait of the lives of those who have been wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death in the United States. The authors skillfully conduct a journey inside the minds of exonerees, allowing readers to see the world from their unique perspectives."
— C. Ronald Huff, University of California, Irvine
"When an innocent man walks off death row, we bask in the happiness that he and his supporters exude, but, as Westervelt and Cook movingly document in this outstanding scholarly treatise, exoneration never ends the despair that follows a wrongful death sentence."
— Robert L. Warden, Northwestern University School of Law