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Diary of a Prison Officer

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Diary of a Prison Officer

By: Josie Channer
Narrated by: Kathryn Vinclaire
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About this listen

Shortlisted for the Pen to Print Award 2020

"I cannot recommend it enough. Aside from everything that is happening around Black Lives Matter, I would say this book is a must read." (Preetha Leela Chockalingam, author)

If you enjoyed the TV series Orange Is the New Black or the book Girl, Woman, Other you’ll love this novel.

Josie Channer, author of Diary of a Prison Officer, says, "I wrote the novel because I felt that the stories from the women of Holloway Prison needed to be told. From the prison governor, officers and prisoners, they all have a story to tell of love, heartbreak and triumph.”

It’s 2003, Tony Blair is still prime minister, and a shy loner from east London, Amber Campbell, joins the prison service searching for purpose.

Behind the walls of the women’s prison, Amber is determined to prove that she has what it takes to become a tornado officer. She makes a pact with two close friends to support each other no matter what. However, the three Black women struggle when they experience discrimination and disappointment at every turn.

There is rising racial tension in her hometown when far right local councilors are elected. Amber reflects on the prison system in her blog and takes an emotional journey off the beaten track through Africa to find love.

©2020 Josie Channer (P)2020 Josie Channer
Fiction Historical Fiction World Literature Heartfelt
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Not quite as sold

I can't help feeling this is two books crudely jammed together; whilst there are some interesting stories of the Author's time at Holloway, the majority of the book is set on the Author's various holidays and every other chapter is about the Author's quest to interpret race and identity in the context of their own life - for reasons that aren't really explained. The setting is quite clumsy - literally bouncing from the prison to a trip to Africa or America that takes place 10 years later, and then back again in a way that feels very disjointed indeed. It's therefore quite difficult to follow a coherent plot line in either of the two stories that are being told here; perhaps because they're only told in alternate chapters, neither of the two stories get developed very well, and neither really resolve. The narration is good, with particularly good voicing of the individual characters, but they're let down by the technical post production stuff; lots of unnaturally short pauses between sentenses from where different material has been joined together can make it difficult to identify paragraphs or follow the flow, and frequent moments where the narrator is speaking over themselves, or where there's clearly words missing. Overall, not quite as sold; perhaps the written book is better.

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Sound quality not good

Good book but narrator sounds like a computer! And sounds weird with headphones in! You just need to get past the sound quality

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