Jeff Smith is a former Missouri State Senator who represented the city of St. Louis from 2007 until 2009, when he pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice in a previous campaign. Having served a yearlong sentence in Kentucky's FCI Manchester, he is now an assistant professor at the New School's Milano School of International Affairs, Management, and Urban Planning. He lives in New Jersey with his wife and two children.
"Part personal memoir, part academic treatise, part political
polemic, "Mr. Smith Goes to Prison "is required reading for anyone
interested in learning more about life on the inside, the history
of crime and punishment, and the issue of criminal justice reform."
"GQ""Partly funny, partly urgent and wholly unnerving - a mashup of
'House of Cards' and 'Orange Is the New Black'" "The New York
Post""With empathy and insight, Smith s book takes on one of the
country s most complicated and fraught policy issues while also
providing a gripping memoir of an experience all of us would prefer
to miss." "Salon.com"""
""
"""hilarious, insightful, and disturbing all at once."
"DailyKos.com"
""
"""The prison memoir is a classic mode of American literature, and
Smith updates the form for the 21st century, in...brilliantly
observed passages telling us everything we secretly wanted to know.
Then he pivots and makes all of this about much more than himself
and his personal arc. He makes his mistakes and punishment pay off
in an intimately detailed yet data-driven argument for making
sweeping reform to criminal sentencing guidelines and prison
policy." - "St. Louis American" This eye-opening book reveals the
sometimes-gray shades of politics, and more importantly, reminds
all that prison can be steps away for anyone, no matter what the
profession. This book is needed to jump-start a national
conversation about over-incarceration and rational criminal justice
reform. Claire McCaskill Well written and insightful, "Mr. Smith
Goes to Prison" asks us to question the way opportunity and
punishment are apportioned in our society. Prepare for a bevy of
emotions: humor and frustration; elation and grievance. This book
and this story are great platforms to better understand the way our
justice system works, and what can be done to address its fissures.
Wes Moore This is a terrific and timely book with a compelling
narrative that challenges us to think more critically about what
mass incarceration is doing to all of us. Bryan Stevenson "Mr.
Smith Goes to Prison" joins Michelle Alexander's "The New Jim Crow"
as essential reading on America's greatest failure: our prison
system. I was transfixed by this book: a middle class white
politician goes to prison for some hard time and turns out to be a
great writer and a keen observer and interpreter of all he sees.
Anyone who wants to work on fixing the prison system ought to start
by reading this riveting book. Howard Dean Jeff Smith takes us
inside the prison experience like never before. You feel like
you're inside the walls with him, living the gritty, scary, and
tragic reality of prison life. Toure"
"Partly funny, partly urgent and wholly unnerving - a mashup of
'House of Cards' and 'Orange Is the New Black'" "The New York
Post""With empathy and insight, Smith s book takes on one of the
country s most complicated and fraught policy issues while also
providing a gripping memoir of an experience all of us would prefer
to miss." "Salon.com"""
""
"""hilarious, insightful, and disturbing all at once."
"DailyKos.com"
""
"""The prison memoir is a classic mode of American literature, and
Smith updates the form for the 21st century, in...brilliantly
observed passages telling us everything we secretly wanted to know.
Then he pivots and makes all of this about much more than himself
and his personal arc. He makes his mistakes and punishment pay off
in an intimately detailed yet data-driven argument for making
sweeping reform to criminal sentencing guidelines and prison
policy." - "St. Louis American" This eye-opening book reveals the
sometimes-gray shades of politics, and more importantly, reminds
all that prison can be steps away for anyone, no matter what the
profession. This book is needed to jump-start a national
conversation about over-incarceration and rational criminal justice
reform. Claire McCaskill Well written and insightful, "Mr. Smith
Goes to Prison" asks us to question the way opportunity and
punishment are apportioned in our society. Prepare for a bevy of
emotions: humor and frustration; elation and grievance. This book
and this story are great platforms to better understand the way our
justice system works, and what can be done to address its fissures.
Wes Moore This is a terrific and timely book with a compelling
narrative that challenges us to think more critically about what
mass incarceration is doing to all of us. Bryan Stevenson "Mr.
Smith Goes to Prison" joins Michelle Alexander's "The New Jim Crow"
as essential reading on America's greatest failure: our prison
system. I was transfixed by this book: a middle class white
politician goes to prison for some hard time and turns out to be a
great writer and a keen observer and interpreter of all he sees.
Anyone who wants to work on fixing the prison system ought to start
by reading this riveting book. Howard Dean Jeff Smith takes us
inside the prison experience like never before. You feel like
you're inside the walls with him, living the gritty, scary, and
tragic reality of prison life. Toure"
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |