"Imprisoned Minds takes readers on a profound psychological journey through the landscape of childhood trauma, physical incarceration, and the relentless desire for freedom. Maloney’s storytelling and Wright's insights amplify the voices of countless incarcerated men, shedding light on the broader societal issues they face. This compelling narrative reveals the heartbreaking reality of young minds trapped in the cycle of abuse and imprisonment—roaming cities, lingering on street corners, hidden in drug dens, confined in the back of police cars, and lying in hospital beds. If there is any book that can help break this cycle, Imprisoned Minds is it!"— Shaka Senghor, bestselling author of Writing My Wrongs and Letters to the Sons of Society
"Imprisoned Minds: Lost Boys, Trapped Men, and Solutions from Within the Prison is unlike any other book I have seen published in the field. The book is captivating, well written and draws the reader in, making it hard to put down."
— Cheryl Lero Johnson, co-author of Correctional Theory: Context and Consequences
"A powerful look at six incarcerated men whose stories reveal how lived experience, trauma and cultural context shape behavior. . . . This is not a sensationalized tale of crime and punishment. It is a nuanced, human-centered narrative that gives voice to men often relegated to headlines and misconceptions."
— Corrections1
"These are fascinating and highly readable vignettes, covering a breadth of human adventure and misadventure. . . . Recommended."
— Choice
"Searing and vulnerable. . . . It is most powerfully understood as a corrective lens fitted onto the entire field of criminology. . . . Maloney and Wright's deeply humanizing treatment of otherwise gut-wrenching stories, and the crystalline first-person perspective through which each is told, mean that the stories don't just grip us: they are us. We aren't just swept along by them; we come to understand how those who lived them were swept along, too. . . . Whether we are primarily educators or researchers, we put this book down not only knowing how to fulfill our role more fully but knowing that we must."
— Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books
“This is an exciting and overdue contribution to both scholarly knowledge production and public policy. In clear, engaging writing, the authors challenge readers' preconceived notions about criminality as a fixed state of being. Imprisoned Minds suggests how we might break the cycle of incarceration through robust social and economic infrastructures of care.”
— Meghan G. McDowell, Winston-Salem State University