Publishers Weekly
★ 04/08/2024
In 2018, when reporting on Tennessee’s first execution in over 10 years, journalist Hale became intrigued by a group standing vigil at Riverbend Maximum Security Institution. As Hale relates in his moving and musical debut, this small but devoted coterie of regular death row visitors had formed haphazardly over the previous decade and hadn’t considered themselves activists. Some were journalists who had reported on death row; most began as religious practitioners visiting in a spiritual capacity and had not expected to develop anti–death penalty beliefs. But as the state planned more executions, the group began to advocate for clemency (“They’re trying to kill my friends,” one member explains). Hale tracks their growing distress as seven inmates are executed over two years. He also outlines his own gut-wrenching conversion to their point of view, explaining that, though he had previously been anti–death penalty, he had not viscerally felt the inhumanity of execution until meeting men about to be killed. The group believes such meetings will irrevocably alter anyone’s perspective on the morality of execution, and they continuously recruit new visitors for this reason. In graceful prose, Hale brings that ethos to his reporting, offering unflinching portrayals of the executed men, including their crimes, to give a bone-deep sense of their humanity. This beautiful and spiritually uplifting account finds hope in a dark place. (Mar.)
From the Publisher
"An eye-opening journey to a place that’s hard to access, rarely seen and shrouded by myths of monsters and abominations. ... Death Row Welcomes You demands that we not look away." - New York Times
“A gutting journey into dark places that most people never see. Deeply researched, Steven Hale’s book weaves together years of immersive reporting into a narrative that stands as a testament to the value of dogged journalists who can document hidden worlds. The stories he tells will haunt you long after you’ve finished reading.” - LitHub
"In graceful prose, Hale brings that ethos to his reporting, offering unflinching portrayals of the executed men, including their crimes, to give a bone-deep sense of their humanity. This beautiful and spiritually uplifting account finds hope in a dark place." - Publishers Weekly STARRED REVIEW
"With vivid and deep reportage spanning several years, Death Row Welcomes You enlightens readers not only by conveying the "waking nightmare" that West and other death-row inmates suffered before they made the worst decisions of their lives, but also by revealing the arbitrary nature of the death penalty. Should be required reading for anyone interested in social justice, politics and the law." - Times Free Press
“Hale’s chronicle is an affecting and important contribution to discussions about the death penalty… There is crucial inside information here and a sense of urgency as execution dates are set and arrive.” - Booklist
“A haunting debut. Readers will reflect on this captivating, deeply reported story for years to come.” - BookPage, STARRED REVIEW
"A thoughtful, provocative contribution to the literature on the death penalty." - Kirkus
“With vivid and deep reportage spanning several years, Death Row Welcomes You enlightens readers … should be required reading for anyone interested in social justice, politics, and the law. Beyond humanizing the condemned and crediting the people who work tirelessly to help them, it exposes dark political truths about Tennessee’s most powerful men.” - Chapter 16
“An unflinching witness who dares us to see the full humanity of the condemned and interrogate the very premise of the death penalty.” - Sister Helen Prejean
"In a time of true crime and hot takes, Steven Hale is here with riveting portraits of people who use their privilege to care for the least among us. In the community that formed around death row, you catch a glance at a future with less rage and retribution. You see what it takes to understand violence, and how we might build a society with less of it." - Maurice Chammah, author of Let the Lord Sort Them: The Rise and Fall of the Death Penalty
"Like the finest of journalists, Steven Hale has managed to examine a complex and agonizing subject – capital punishment and humanize those marked for execution, visiting them for months before their final hour. He lets us in to his own life while illuminating that of men on death row – a prisoner who calls as Hale drives his young children to pre-school is grateful to hear something he never thought he would hear again: the sing-song of children in the background. This is an intimate journey every reader should take to understand what is being done in American prisons in our name." - Mary Jo McConahay, author of Playing God, American Catholic Bishops and the Far Right
“Death Row Welcomes You is a gutting journey into dark places that most people never see. Deeply researched, Steven Hale’s book weaves together years of immersive reporting into a narrative that stands as a testament to the value of dogged journalists who can document hidden worlds. The stories he tells will haunt you long after you've finished reading.” - Keri Blakinger, author of Corrections in Ink
"Death Row Welcomes You discovers how hope and humanity can blossom in the least likely of places: Tennessee’s death row, where capital punishment has become routine, bureaucratized, and unremarkably cruel. Through years of reporting, Steven Hale tells an extraordinary story of people marked by pain, trauma, and inescapable transgression, and what happens when they find friendship and unconditional love. A masterpiece of crime, punishment, and redemption." - Daniel J. Sharfstein, Dick and Martha Lansden Chair in Law and director of the George Barrett Social Justice Program at Vanderbilt Law School
"Steven Hale's prose is vivid, engaging, and often witty. More importantly, even as words describe unspeakably grim events, they spill over with a deeply affecting humanity. I'm not at all surprised that Steven would find an unlikely spring of fellowship, compassion, and empathy deep in the bowels of one of our most backward and barbaric institutions. He's a gifted, dogged, and empathetic journalist, and great journalists find great stories. The gift to readers is that the person most equipped to tell this story is also the person who found it." - Radley Balko, author of Rise of the Warrior Cop
Kirkus Reviews
2024-01-05
A reporter takes readers inside Tennessee’s system of capital punishment.
In 2018, following a decade-long hiatus, Tennessee resumed killing death row inmates. As Nashville-based journalist Hale writes, the last time he’d paid much attention to an execution was that of Timothy McVeigh in 2001—though within a decade another 489 people were executed around the country, “and I don’t recall being aware of a single one.” This harrowing book is sufficient penitence for his innocence, as he recounts his journey into the penal system as an authorized witness to death by lethal injection. He opens with a man who, mentally ill and traumatized in childhood, raped and murdered a 7-year-old girl, which prompts Hale to grapple with the conundrum that frames the discussion around capital punishment. The author evenhandedly presents the victim’s side; the little girl’s mother, for instance, voiced her dismay that her daughter’s story was overshadowed by the murderer’s troubled past. On the other hand, if one of his daughters had been the victim, “I would want to light the man on fire myself.” Even so, Hale comes down on the side of ending capital punishment, and for several reasons: Juries are sometimes unaware of extenuating circumstances such as mental illness and substance abuse, wrongful convictions are not uncommon, and judges and juries are fallible. Yet, as another victim’s relative observes, “if they give you a life sentence it means [you serve only] about thirteen years in jail before you’re out.” Tennessee’s killings came to a temporary halt during the pandemic because vaccines, not lethal drug cocktails, were the order of the day—but this situation has changed again as the pandemic wanes, making it possible that “men on the row would start getting dates and the line would start moving again.”
A thoughtful, provocative contribution to the literature on the death penalty.