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The Maximum Security Book Club
The Maximum Security Book Club: Reading Literature in a Men's Prison | Mikita Brottman
22 posts | 24 read | 86 to read
A riveting account of the two years literary scholar Mikita Brottman spent reading literature with criminals in a maximum-security mens prison outside Baltimore, and what she learned from themOrange Is the New Black meets Reading Lolita in Tehran. On sabbatical from teaching literature to undergraduates, and wanting to educate a different kind of student, Mikita Brottman starts a book club with a group of convicts from the Jessup Correctional Institution in Maryland. She assigns them ten dark, challenging classicsincluding Conrads Heart of Darkness, Shakespeares Macbeth, Stevensons Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Poes story The Black Cat, and Nabokovs Lolitabooks that dont flinch from evoking the isolation of the human struggle, the pain of conflict, and the cost of transgression. Although Brottman is already familiar with these works, the convicts open them up in completely new ways. Their discussions may only be about literature, but for the prisoners, everything is at stake. Gradually, the inmates open up about their lives and families, their disastrous choices, their guilt and loss. Brottman also discovers that life in prison, while monotonous, is never without incident. The book club members struggle with their assigned reading through solitary confinement; on lockdown; in between factory shifts; in the hospital; and in the middle of the chaos of blasting televisions, incessant chatter, and the constant banging of metal doors. Though The Maximum Security Book Club never loses sight of the moral issues raised in the selected reading, it refuses to back away from the unexpected insights offered by the company of these complex, difficult men. It is a compelling, thoughtful analysis of literatureand prison lifelike nothing youve ever read before.
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review
Robotswithpersonality
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Mehso-so

Awkward. I was hoping for honest reflections on the role reading, engaging with books, can play in incarcerated people's lives, and that was part of the text. The awkward part was the author's realization that literature didn't play as big a role in their lives as in hers, that the book club was an escape that she seemed happy to be part of until confronted with its relative position in others' lives and ends on a self-pitying note. 1/4

Robotswithpersonality 2/? There's a real push pull between humanizing the incarcerated, something society needs more of, and focusing on the author's own feelings, experiences. Maybe it's just trying for honest, in which case the unflattering personal portrait is an accomplishment of truth. 5mo
Robotswithpersonality 3/? I think my personal bias factors in, because formal schooling emphasizing grinding away at a dry, incomprehensible text in faith that there is hidden brilliance is similar to the experiences that sent me into a decade long reading slump, reading behaviour that I now heartily reject. Reading her inflict that on the group intermittently between more savvy book choices is painful. 5mo
Robotswithpersonality ⚠️animal death, mention of SA 5mo
Robotswithpersonality On the plus side, I found a memoir for my TBR actually written by an incarcerated person, Sentence: Ten Years and A Thousand Books in Prison. I'm hopeful the shift in POV/author will make for a more focused read on the subject matter. 5mo
Larkken Sounds like a nf version of the tagged with a side of saviorism, sorta 5mo
7 likes5 comments
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swynn
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Mehso-so

It's the memoir of an English professor who leads a literature course in a maximum security prison. It's okay: the premise is appealing, and the discussions are occasionally enlightening. But also the author sometimes comes across as naive or self-superior or both. To her credit, she often acknowledges her missteps and does not attempt to justify them; still, it's sometimes hard to sympathize with her or see what the takeaway is supposed to be.

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TheKidUpstairs
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Panpan

The concept is fascinating, and when the men's thoughts and opinions are allowed into the narrative you can see the potential for a thought provoking read. But Brottman is, quite frankly, insufferable. She gets frustrated when the men don't share her own views on whatever they're reading, she complains that they're not connecting to the work, but then says they're wrong whenever they start drawing connections. Just when it seems that she's 👇

TheKidUpstairs ... turning things around and opening up, Lolita happens. She doesn't judge the men for their crimes, but regularly judges them in other ways, especially for not being what she perceived them to be at all times. And she has a sense of entitled outrage with the COs that is rather annoying. 2y
TheKidUpstairs But at least I get to check off a prompt for #Booked2021 - #Blackjack21 Club in Title @4thhouseontheleft @BarbaraTheBibliophage @Cinfhen 2y
Cinfhen Hahaha 🤣 well there‘s that!! Fantastic review!! 2y
68 likes3 comments
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NatalieR
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Panpan

This one peaked my interests; prisons and books. The author shares her experience facilitating a book club inside a male prison and the lives of the inmates participating. She learned that facilitating a college-level book club with people who have spent most of their lives incarcerated is vastly different from teaching college students. She had unrealistic expectations of the inmates and had difficulty meeting them where they were. #MountTBR

MsMelissa That sucks. I have this one on my TBR pile. 3y
Tamra Shoot, because the premise is super interesting. What would make her have those expectations???? 3y
NatalieR @MsMelissa Sorry to deliver a disappointing review. I was pretty bummed myself. I had high hopes for this one. 3y
NatalieR @Tamra While I believe she has good intentions with her purpose of the book club, she is super naive about the personalities of inmates. She sees them how she wants to see them and becomes very misguided. I wrote a review on Goodreads if you‘re interested in my detailed thoughts. 3y
97 likes5 comments
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Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

I really enjoyed this book! Brottman has taught literature classes in a prison and branched off from this by starting a small book club. She takes us through the books read, the men‘s discussions of the books, and the inevitable turn of the conversation into their daily lives. I found it fascinating and am definitely interesting in reading some of the books she covered.

Libby1 Have you read Hag-Seed? 6y
EvieBee This sounds excellent. I purchased it as a Kindle deal about 2 years ago and have been meaning to get to it. Thanks for putting it back on my radar. 6y
Hooked_on_books @Libby1 I have not. Does it share some themes with this one? 6y
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Hooked_on_books @EvieBee I hope you enjoy it! 6y
Libby1 @Hooked__on__books - it‘s Margaret Atwood‘s re-telling of Shakespeare‘s The Tempest. A theatre director runs a course on Shakespeare in a men‘s prison and they perform a modern take on The Tempest with a very big twist. 6y
Hooked_on_books @Libby1 You know, I had heard it was a Tempest retelling but had no idea it was set in a men‘s prison. That actually makes me consider it and I hadn‘t before. Thanks! 6y
60 likes1 stack add7 comments
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kaykay521
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Mehso-so

This was interesting enough, but I wasn't completely engrossed. For starters I hadn't read most of the literature she'd chosen for the book club except Macbeth, also I found her kinda naive about things in regards to the prisoners, plus asking them to read Lolita was ridiculous 🙄.

Debiw781 She asked them to read Lolita ?!?!? 6y
kaykay521 @Debiw781 yep she did 6y
Debiw781 @kaykay521 😳😳 6y
charl08 I've read a few books in this area, this one sounds interesting. I think my favourite is 2y
44 likes1 stack add4 comments
blurb
BookishMarginalia
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Embarking on a new nonfiction #audiobook 👍🏼

Captivatedbybooks This is sounds interesting 6y
Sharpeipup Looking forward to your review 6y
ptkpepe98 This is in my TBR...I'm looking forward to reading it, probably in 2018.😬 6y
162 likes13 stack adds3 comments
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MLRio
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I have the Best. Agent. Ever. 🥃 #whiskey #writing

diovival 😂 7y
27 likes1 stack add1 comment
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TieDyeDude
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Bailedbailed

This book could have been titled "Why Don't Prisoners Like the Books I Like?" Maybe it gets better at the end, but I haven't read any of the books they are discussing, so there isn't anything to keep me interested, and I have 6 other holds from the library. I'm moving on.

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ValerieAndBooks
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Lit professor Brottman establishes a book club in a men's maximum security prison. The convicts provide different perspectives on classics such as Poe's The Black Cat, Melville's Bartleby the Scrivener, and Nabokov's Lolita (spoiler: most of them hated Lolita). Brottman also shares their lives before prison and how it is now, without being voyeuristic or sensational. Very good memoir.

CrowCAH Pretty cover! 😍 7y
ValerieAndBooks @CrowCAH it is pretty. Oh, just realized the picture doesn't show clearly the spines on the cover -- the titles on them are what were discussed within this book! 7y
Reviewsbylola This sounds fascinating. 7y
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ValerieAndBooks
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This whole quote-screenshot is so thought-provoking. As the author says, sometimes literature does indeed creep up on you; it doesn't always grab you by the throat right away. This non-fiction book is about the author running a book club with some prisoners at a maximum security location in Baltimore.

merelybookish That's a wonderful passage. 7y
batsy Thanks for sharing this. The relationship between the reader and the book is always interesting to think about. Sometimes books are just not right for the person, or come at the wrong time. 7y
kspenmoll Great passage. I have at times found a book that did not speak to me, did at a different time- or meant something totally different at another time in life. An example: I was never able to approach/ read Middlemarch until this past year - must be patience, maturity, exposure to literature. 7y
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Zelma That is a fantastic passage and I definitely agree with it. How is the book overall? 7y
BekaReid Yes! Love this passage and have found this to be true in my own reading experience. 7y
Michael_Gee I REALLY enjoyed that book. Even more than I thought I would. I think my favorite chapter is the one where they read The Metamorphosis 7y
ValerieAndBooks @merelybookish yes. I think it's a good reminder of how to approach literature. 7y
ValerieAndBooks @batsy I agree. I also think it's a matter of how willing we are to be patient with the book. Today's fast-paced society makes it harder to stay with the slower pacing and wordiness of many older classics (that applies to me sometimes too). 7y
ValerieAndBooks @kspenmoll I find this true when I do re-readings! Picking up on something I might have missed before, etc. Middlemarch -- I'd like to attempt that when I'm an empty-nester -- I don't think I can right now 😊 7y
ValerieAndBooks @Zelma I'm about halfway through --and really liking it and the perspective of the prisoners towards the books discussed. 7y
ValerieAndBooks @BekaReid it's also a good reason to have a TBR stack -- never know when it's the right time -- if not, back in the TBR stack it goes (of course the truly dreadful ones get donated instead)! 7y
ValerieAndBooks @Cat.snores.and.classics it's definitely a different angle to books about books! I took a peak to see where the Metamorphosis is and it's towards the end of the book. I'm halfway through already so I'll get there soon 😊! 7y
68 likes10 stack adds12 comments
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MandyJohnson
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Panpan

I kept waiting for this book to stop making me mad but it never did. I'm sure that she deeply cared about these men, and as an English major myself, I understand loving literature, but I just feel like every single chapter in this book was her adventures in privilege and her inability to see her students complexly.

Notafraidofwords Sigh, that would upset me. 7y
37 likes2 comments
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sofiaga
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One of my reading goals for this year is to read more non-fiction. I found this book through @bookriot and I am excited to start it.

Notafraidofwords I want to read this but I'm scared b/c I'm not sure if it describes the prison system and I find it disheartening. 7y
sofiaga @Notafraidofwords Yes, I can see how that can be a little scary. However, it may also give so much context to understand how meaningful books can be to them. Last year Costa Rica's book fair had a reading by poets who were all people deprived of their liberty. The police was sorrounding the room and it was so powerful, it reminded us all how in this context they could create. (edited) 7y
Notafraidofwords @sofiaga that's amazing! 7y
13 likes2 stack adds3 comments
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Smrloomis
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Ok, just one more. What is up with all the deals lately?

Tamarity That's how they get you! 7y
SuperPunkNinja I dunno but I hope they keep coming! 7y
minkyb I don't but now I'm think I need a new kindle! That's why they do it!!!!! 7y
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Suetara I picked this one up, too. 7y
rjsthumbelina I got this one, too! Between kindle and nook, there have been SO MANY sales lately!! Glad my nook has so much storage...but, unfortunately, there arent enough hours to read in the day! 7y
Smrloomis @Tamarity @McShelfington my TBR is exploding 👍🏽 7y
Smrloomis @minkyb I use the app on my phone but a new Kindle would be nice 🤔 7y
Smrloomis @Suetara @rjsthumbelina I hope this turns out to be good. I have so many new things to read now 😀 7y
78 likes1 stack add8 comments
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lauralovesbooks1
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Christmas Book Haul

6 likes1 comment
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ReadingEnvy
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promising so far #nonfictionnovember

35 likes6 stack adds
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Jen2
Pickpick

On a roll this weekend!!!

55 likes1 stack add
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Jen2
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Starting this one tonight. Here's to a weekend of reading!!

Nebklvr This sounds really interesting! 8y
read_diverse_books The name kind of confused me. I thought you were reading a book for a book club you're in. Lol 8y
Tcip @Jen2 I work in a prison! Let me know how it is!! 8y
Dorothea_An Looking forward to your comments! 8y
Bookish.Heart This looks like an interesting one! Looking forward to your thoughts! 8y
125 likes20 stack adds5 comments
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Hooked_on_books
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I'm a day behind on #augustphotochallenge. I'm embarrassed (proud?) to admit that this isn't my entire August book haul. Litsy is full of enablers! I should try to match my numbers of books read to bought, but I fear that equation is likely to remain lopsided. Oops. 😬

LeahBergen Ooo, nice! 8y
BookishFeminist Holy cow! 🐄 that'll keep you occupied for a while at least! Some excellent choices 👌🏼 8y
49 likes2 comments
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MaryBeth
Pickpick

I really enjoyed this book.

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kristina_with_a_k
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I hope this is as good as I want it to be.

shawnmooney I share your wish! I'd never heard of it but it's going onto my TBR list! 8y
Viji This sounds very interesting! Added. 8y
13 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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scottgotplot
Pickpick

This book is about the power of literature to positively impact peoples' lives including convicts. This was an interesting social experiment. I give her the benefit of the doubt that she didn't just use these convicts as an excuse to write a book since she did some non-profit work in the past.