Pete Earley's The Hot House gave America a riveting, uncompromising
look at the nation's most notorious prison--the federal penitentiary in
Leavenworth, Kansas--a book that Kirkus Reviews called a "fascinating
white-knuckle tour of hell, brilliantly reported." Now Earley shows us a
different, even more intimate view of justice--and
injustice--American-style.
In Monroeville, Alabama, in the fall of 1986, a pretty junior college
student was found murdered in the back of the dry cleaning shop where
she worked. Several months later, Walter "Johnny D." McMillian, a black
man with no criminal record, was tried, convicted, and sentenced to
death for the crime. As McMillian sat in his cell on Alabama's death
row, a young black lawyer named Bryan Stevenson took up his own
investigation into the murder of Ronda Morrison. Finding a trial tainted
by procedural mistakes, conflicting eyewitness accounts, and outright
perjury, he was determined to see McMillian go free--even if it took the
most unconventional means...