Prison days and nights
An edition of Prison days and nights (1933)
By Victor Folke Nelson
Publish Date
1934
Publisher
Little, Brown
Language
eng
Pages
282
Description:
I possess the copy of this book, published by Little, Brown and Company that was possessed by Victor's wife, Pearl Nelson. It contains marginal notes in Victor's own handwriting..and also the suicide note he wrote to his wife when he took his own life in a Boston hotel room. He was one of 4 children..and my mother's brother. She was most ashamed of him, and kept him a dark secret until we became adults. Victor's youngest brother, George, left me this book when he passed away in the early 90's. The book is about the life that Victor spent, first in an orphan's home in Avon, run by the Lutheran Church...and where the matron was very abusive...and then his life after he ran away from the home...and became among other things, an interpreter on a Swedish ship, where he robbed the rich and probably drank most of the money that it brought him. He was an exceptionally brilliant man, but truly misguided. Most of the stories I have learned about Victor have come to me from my Uncle George, who also was in the Lutheran home until he ran away at age 16. Victor was born in Malmo, Sweden in June of 1898. The saddest thing about this book is that it could have been written yesterday. There is little good to say about our prison system, and reform..and no easy answers to the problem
subjects: Crime and criminals, Prisons, Prisons and reformatories, Criminology
Places: United States