Literature and Writing Quotes in Writing My Wrongs: Life, Death, and Redemption in an American Prison

How we cite our quotes: (Chapter.Paragraph)

Quote #7

It was through these letters that I realized writing could serve as a means of escape. With a pencil and a piece of paper, it was almost like I could travel outside of prison and go wherever I desired. I could stand on the corner in my neighborhood, and no one could stop me. I could drive down the freeway to see my ex-girlfriend in Ohio, and the bars and wired fences couldn't hold me back. Writing was freedom, so I wrote till my fingers were sore.(12.36)

We're all about the power of writing here at Shmoop, and this has got to be one of the great plugs for writing of all time. It's astonishing that it lets Shaka feel truly free even when he's serving a long sentence.

Quote #8

I will never forget how the brothers in the library embraced me when they saw that I came consistently to check out books. Whenever a new title arrived by a Black author, they would hold it for me, and eventually it got to the point where anytime I showed up, they would already have books picked out for me. The brothers made me give detailed reports on the books they gave me, in part because they wanted to know whether they were worth reading, but also because they wanted to make sure I had read them myself. It was because of the wise counsel of Baruti and the other brothers, and the way they challenged me to think, that I was able to leave prison with a sense of purpose.(14.40)

Reading doesn't have to be just a solitary thing. It can also be something that a whole community finds satisfying, as Shaka finds out. And the way these guys support Shaka ultimately makes a difference outside prison as well, because Shaka takes what he learned with him when he's released.

Quote #9

But real changes came when I started keeping a journal. Anytime I got angry at one of the other inmates, I would immediately grab a lined notepad and begin writing down what I wanted to do to him and why.(19.28)

No wonder Writing My Wrongs kicks off with that Socrates quote about how the unexamined life is not worth living [See "What's Up With the Epigraph" for more]. Self-examination through journaling genuinely turned Shaka's life around. Socrates has never sounded more relevant.