College for the Incarcerated Book News: New Prison Education Books in the Works

College for the Incarcerated Book News: New Prison Education Books in the Works

While it is still early yet, I have an announcement to make concerning my book Education Behind Bars: A Win-Win Strategy for Maximum Security. As you know, Sunbury Press published this title in early 2012 to rave reviews from the prison presses. Since its publication, we’ve been approached by several publishers enthusiastic about giving this project new life and enhanced exposure: McFarland and Company and Prisology. I want to touch upon both today.

As you know from previous posts, I decided to divide Education Behind Bars into two books: one for academics and one for prisoners. This way, both texts could be completely revised and updated, then more effectively marketed to their target markets. The revisions are now complete on both books and publishing contracts have been signed for both.

McFarland and Company picked up the academic book and are publishing it under the title College for Convicts: The Case for Higher Education in American Prisons. And Prisology has picked up the prisoner correspondence guide, which is tentatively titled College for the Incarcerated. Both publishers seem enthusiastic about the projects.

If you’re interested in the academic version (for the general public and lawmakers), please head over to McFarland and Company’s sales page for College for Convicts, where you can pre-order your copy today. This book will be out either late this year or early next year.

If you know someone in prison who wants to purchase the prisoner correspondence guide College for the Incarcerated (tentative title), stay tuned to Prison Education News, where we’ll publish periodic status updates. This book is in the editorial phase, where we and the team at Prisology are making final content and structural decisions before moving forward to the copyediting stage.

Some official inertia stagnates the field of prison education. It’s hard to open new programs and convince prison administrators and lawmakers that existing programs should remain. It’s even harder to sell the idea of educating prisoners to the public. These are the facts, cold as they might be. But there is also good news. We at Prison Education News have worked hard to keep a light burning bright for the prison education industry. It has not been easy, it has not always been fun, but it has been necessary, and these two books are the culmination of all of our hard work these past few years. And with this thought, we ask you to help support our efforts — and prison education programs everywhere — by showing your support and pre-ordering a copy of College for Convicts. This will help to support our efforts at prison education promotion and will result in the allocation of additional marketing funds from our publishers to these much-needed books.

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