Ratings1
Average rating5
In 2014, Mackenzie Basham dropped her little boy off at her Mother's house on a Friday night, and never returned. The following week her family saw 19-year-old Mackenzie's mug shot on the local evening news channel, she has not been home since. This is the true story of Mackenzie's mother's personal diaries to her daughter through years of her incarceration, and Mackenzie's letters written back. They grieve one another yet still alive, as well as tackle issues of drug abuse, suicide, homosexuality, family acceptance, violence, prison rape, police corruption, and her child growing up without any parents. This story makes you feel like you are sitting in the prison cell afraid to close your eyes some nights, as well as Mackenzie describing the mental and physical torture many women inmates endure while in a state prison in the U.S. The book also puts you in the frame of mind of a shattered mother who has watched a perfectly beautiful child spiral from her pride and joy down to hit rock bottom into their very own living hell.
Reviews with the most likes.
Poignant. Haunting. Painfully honest. You feel Judy's and Mackenzie's pain almost as if you were there holding their hands through it - except you can't be. Unless you have been in their shoes, there is no way to truly comprehend what either of them is going through. Well written, very insightful into a world many read about and many watch on television but few actually live. This is a story of mistakes, injustice, and a mother's unconditional love.