Infinite Hope: How Wrongful Conviction, Solitary Confinement, and 12 Years on Death Row Failed to Kill My Soul

Infinite Hope: How Wrongful Conviction, Solitary Confinement, and 12 Years on Death Row Failed to Kill My Soul

by Anthony Graves

Narrated by Leon Nixon

Unabridged — 7 hours, 47 minutes

Infinite Hope: How Wrongful Conviction, Solitary Confinement, and 12 Years on Death Row Failed to Kill My Soul

Infinite Hope: How Wrongful Conviction, Solitary Confinement, and 12 Years on Death Row Failed to Kill My Soul

by Anthony Graves

Narrated by Leon Nixon

Unabridged — 7 hours, 47 minutes

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Overview

Written by a wrongfully convicted man who spent 16 years in solitary confinement and 12 years on death row, a powerful memoir about fighting for-and winning-exoneration.

In the summer of 1992, a grandmother, a teenage girl, and four children under the age of ten were beaten and stabbed to death in Somerville, Texas. The perpetrator set the house on fire to cover his tracks, deepening the heinousness of the crime and rocking the tiny community to its core. Authorities were eager to make an arrest. Five days later, Anthony Graves was in custody.

Graves, then twenty-six years old and without an attorney, was certain that his innocence was obvious. He did not know the victims, he had no knowledge about the crime, and he had an airtight alibi with witnesses. There was also no physical evidence linking him to the scene. Yet Graves was indicted, convicted of capital murder, sentenced to death, and, over the course of twelve years on death row, given two execution dates. He was not freed for eighteen years, two months, four days.

Through years of suffering the whims of rogue prosecutors, vote-hungry district attorneys, and Texas State Rangers who played by their own rules, Graves was frequently exposed to the dire realities of being poor and black in the criminal justice system. He witnessed fellow inmates who became his friends and confidants be taken away, one by one, to their deaths. And he missed out on seeing his three young sons mature into men. Graves's only solace was his infinite hope that the state would not execute him for a crime he did not commit.

To maintain his dignity and sanity, Graves made sure as many people as possible knew about his case. He wrote letters to whomever he thought would listen. Pen pals in countries all over the world became allies, and he attracted the attention of a savvy legal team that overcame setback after setback, chiseling away at the state's faulty case against him. Everyone's efforts eventually worked. After Graves's exoneration, the original prosecutor on his case was disbarred.

Graves is one of a growing number of innocent people exonerated from death row. The moving account of his saga-of his ultimate fight for freedom from inside a prison cell-is as haunting as it is poignant, and as shameful to the legal system as it is inspiring to those on the losing end of it.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

A well-written, matter-of-fact, inspirational account of how a man prevailed against a criminal justice system that is deeply flawed.”
Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review

“[A] skilled and confident narrative. . . It’s [Graves’s] battle to overcome the hidden traumas and loss that makes this such a compelling page-turner.”
Booklist

“Powerful . . . No matter your opinion on the merits of capital punishment, the horror Anthony Graves endured will move you to outrage. . . . It is a story you naturally think can’t happen to you. Pray you could maintain Graves’s extreme fortitude and presence of mind if it did.”
—Hill Harper, author of Letters to a Young Brother: Manifest Your Destiny

“Anthony Graves’s story is one of resilience in the face of injustice. For twelve years, Anthony was silenced and isolated [on death row]. Now he has found his freedom and his voice. Infinite Hope speaks powerfully of the need for reform. By telling his story, Anthony calls on all of us to prevent these injustices from being repeated.”
—US Senator Richard J. Durbin

“By now, everybody should know there are innocent people on death row. But never before has a book by one of those innocent men conveyed how easily this travesty can come about or the sheer terror these inmates face every hour of every day. Anthony Graves’s haunting memoir does exactly that. Infinite Hope will leave you aghast at the failure of our criminal justice system and in awe at Graves’s dignity and strength in the face of this failure.”
—David Dow, author of The Autobiography of an Execution

“Charged, convicted, and put on death row for a crime that he did not commit, Anthony Graves experienced all the brutality the criminal process could muster: fabricated evidence, corrupt prosecutors, callous police, indifferent courts. Even in the face of such unimaginable horrors, Graves refused to accept his fate or surrender his humanity. Infinite Hope is an indictment of American criminal law that will rattle you to the core and inspire you to action.”
—James Forman Jr., author of Locking Up Our Own: Crime and Punishment in Black America

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2017-10-09
A travesty of the Texas judicial system leads to death-row vindication.Though Graves served more than 18 years behind bars for a crime he did not commit, his account is largely without bitterness or outrage—and is all the more powerful because of it. The facts speak for themselves. On a night when the author was with his girlfriend at his mother's apartment, another man named Robert Carter committed a horrific mass murder, killing his young son, a number of other children, and setting the house on fire in order to minimize the evidence. After his apprehension, he confessed, saying he had an accomplice. He named Graves, who only knew Carter's name as a man who had recently married one of Graves' cousins and did not know any of his victims or even the house where the crime had taken place. The author insisted that this was a big mistake, that Carter had lied, and that there was so little to any case against him that he would soon be set free. Unfortunately, he writes, "no one cared about my alibi, or my fate. They wanted someone to blame, and here I was." He took a polygraph and was told he failed, though no record of those results was kept, and then he was identified in a lineup where none of the others were close in age. Though Carter recanted before the grand jury and said he had lied about Graves, the latter was simply presumed guilty at every stage, despite a very weak case against him. Ultimately, the author found a lawyer who not only believed him, but stuck with him, a Texas Monthly reporter who made his case public, and an appeals court that recognized how much wrong had been done to him. But all along, he had his own inner resources and faith that the truth would set him free.A well-written, matter-of-fact, inspirational account of how a man prevailed against a criminal justice system that is deeply flawed.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171819927
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 01/16/2018
Edition description: Unabridged
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