William Ayers is a longtime teacher and activist, award-winning education writer and reformer, and professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He and his wife, Bernardine Dohrn, live in Chicago. They have three sons.
Here is truth exceeding the power of fiction. --Norval Morris,
professor, University of Chicago Law School
"Ayers's book does for incarcerated kids . . . what Studs Terkel
has done for the city's working folks, [and] what Alex Kotlowitz
has done for the residents of its housing projects." --Anthony M.
Platt, Los Angeles Times Book Review
"Bill Ayers is a gifted writer and an acute observer of the inferno
which we call the Juvenile Court. No part of the American justice
system is less observed or more greatly in need of reform. A Kind
and Just Parent is a moving and intensely sympathetic account of
the lives of both the adults and children caught in the sometimes
hopeless maelstrom of our juvenile justice system. At every level,
it is a book full of grace." --Scott Turow, author of Presumed
Innocent
"William Ayers is as sensitive and gifted a chronicler as he is a
teacher. His odyssey-for it is far more than just a tour-through
the juvenile court is Dickensian in its tragic, maddening detail
and dimension; and yet it is strangely hopeful."--Studs Terkel
"At last a heroic and insightful account of what poor young people
have had to endure in the Cook County Juvenile Court system. . . .
Ayers, I salute you. Your words cut true. And no one can escape
their clarion message."--Luis J. Rodriguez, author of Always
Running: La Vida Loca, Gang Days in L.A.
"A very important and disturbing book about the betrayal of Jane
Addams's dream and the ways in which heroic individuals still
struggle to defend the dignity of children in the face of crushing
odds. It is Bill Ayers's immersion in the lives of those who go
before the court that gives this book its strength and passion and
intensity. Vivid narratives are set in context by an author who has
studied history and understands the politics of juvenile injustice.
I hope this book will reach the ears of Congress."--Jonathan Kozol,
author of Amazing Grace and Savage Inequalities
"As juvenile crime increases, the brutal conditions that produce
delinquents have risen even faster. Since 1960 the number of child
abuse or neglect cases handled by juvenile courts has risen five
times faster than delinquency cases, which have nearly quadrupled.
With that in mind, one might ask why so many children become
delinquents and how so many avoid becoming delinqents. . . .
[Ayers] offers a view of delinquent youths you won't see much of on
the evening news. It is not scary enough. It is only tragic."
--Clarence Page, Chicago Tribune
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