Once the request came in, the prison impounded the book on the grounds it was “a threat” to the “rehabilitative objectives of the correctional system.” Blakinger finds it ironic that Okaloosa County, which has one of the highest rates of sentence enhancements in the state of Florida, is framing her book as a danger to rehabilitative goals, especially when the book “is literally about rehabilitation,” as she told Houston’s ABC 13 Eyewitness News. But a few months after its publication, Blakinger learned the Florida Department of Corrections was considering permanently banning her “ dangerously inflammatory” book at prisons across the state after an inmate at Okaloosa Correctional Facility requested the book through the Prison Book Program. Since its release, Blakinger has shared notes on Twitter from people in prison who have found the book to be a tool for hope and post-carceral strength. The book shows how Blakinger and fellow incarcerated people navigated the New York state prison system, profiling their resilience in the face of dehumanizing conditions. In June 2022, Blakinger published Corrections in Ink, a memoir about her experience in the prison system. From 2010 to 2012, Keri Blakinger was incarcerated in state and county correctional facilities for possessing a “ tupperware of heroin.” Since then, she has gone on to work as a prison reporter at the Houston Chronicle, The Marshall Project and, most recently, the Los Angeles Times.
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