What does it cost to stand beside the condemned?
In The Embodiment of Abolition, death penalty abolitionists Jeff Hood and Alli Sullivan offer an unflinching account of life on the front lines of the fight against state killing. This is not a book of statistics or detached policy arguments. It is a raw, embodied testimony from two activists who have written the letters, made the visits, walked the final miles, and witnessed friends strapped to gurneys and killed by the state.
Structured around the visceral realities of this work—Humanity, The Fight, Rage, Grief, Truth, Alone, Success—Hood and Sullivan move between memoir, theology, and moral philosophy to confront what executions do to the condemned, to their families, to the witnesses, and to the soul of a nation. They draw on the searing case of Anthony Sanchez, who wrote the foreword days before Oklahoma executed him, and Arthur Brown Jr., whose final words still echo through these pages.
Here, abolition is not an abstraction. It is presence. It is rage that refuses to burn out. It is grief that refuses to be silenced. It is the radical insistence that the monster we name in others is the monster we refuse to name in ourselves.
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