PROGRESS Fall 2006

Page 15

Book Review:

Life after Life: A Story of Rage and Redemption

Written by EVANS HOPKINS / Reviewed by MARCIA PHILLIPS Evans Hopkins was born in the 1950s in Danville, Virginia, when that city, and indeed the rest of the South, was still segregated. He has memories of shopping at the one big grocery store that accepted black customers and buying shoes without being able to try them on or return them. His family was warm and loving, middle-class, and placed a high value on education. As a teenager, Hopkins loved playing tennis and for a time thought to follow in the footsteps of his idol, Arthur Ashe. But the 1960s were also an era of activism, and young Evans got involved with the Civil Rights Movement, so much so that after his graduation from high school, he went to Oakland, California, to be a part of the Black Panther Party. In Oakland, he began his writing career, working on the Party newspaper. He soon became historian of the group and observed the organization at the time when the Black Panthers moved towards community outreach and working within the system. It was not an easy move, and the dissension within the group, as well as the escalating violence that took several lives, served to foster the radicalism in Hopkins. And the rage. Ultimately, it made him decide to go back to Danville. The man who returned to the city of his birth was far different from the youth who had left. Looking back, Hopkins described himself as being “the quintessential angry young black male.” Convicted of armed robbery, he was sentenced to life in prison. While his rage was still strong, Hopkins also had a talent that served him well. He began to write to overcome the all-encompassing noise of life in prison. Focusing on his themes of social injustice, he reached a national audience in 1982, when the Washington Post published his PROGRESS:. Volume 19, No. 1

essay, “Who’s Afraid of Virginia’s Chair?” a study of the first execution in Virginia after reinstating the death penalty. More articles followed, and he found himself published in the New Yorker, among other noted publications. Excerpts from these writings are included in the book, Life After Life. Interest in this gifted writer, one of the best known incarcerated writers of the end of the 20th Century, grew. Support for his release came not only from the writing community, but also from the prosecutor who sought his life sentence. Hopkins tells of the epiphany that began to turn his life around. He had been told that the gas station attendant whom he had robbed required counseling. “It hit me then. My feeling of injustice had kept me from feeling empathy for the victim of the crime. But my writer’s brain now embraced his pain, imagining the country boy’s sessions with a psychologist, then wondering about the other victims of my crimes: the old night watchman...the people in the bank...” He tells too of the personal pain: the death of his young son, born with a congenital heart defect, the death of his best friend in prison, and that of his girl friend, killed in an accident while on her way to visit him in prison, and the slow decline of his aging parents. After his release from prison in 1997, he returned home one more time, this time to the overwhelming challenges of dealing with aging parents and a daily life that is entirely different to one who has been imprisoned. Writing the book took two years; Hopkins calls the process “gut-wrenching.” At its conclusion, he has moved beyond the anger and learned to forgive, not only society, but also himself. With this book, he hopes to build a

legacy, and he thinks of the “young man searching a prison library, searching the shelves as I once did, looking for hope and inspiration – something to let him know his life matters.” The book, published in 2005, achieved considerable acclaim, and has shown Hopkins an interesting path for his own continuing redemption. Hopkins lives in Richmond, although he still spends considerable time in Danville. In addition to his writing, he is working on two projects. The first is a writing program that he calls Your Stories Matter for at-risk youth, which he would also like to take into correctional facilities. The program encourages participants to write, either poetry or journal entries, so that, he says, “they will learn to understand that their lives matter, and as long as they believe in themselves, they can achieve. I tell them how writing saved my life and helped me to rise above my situation while in prison.” He continues, “My message to administrators is that, by using writing as a tool and helping students to enjoy sharing their stories, reading aloud to one another and seeing their stories in print, they will help students to believe in themselves. I want educators, as well, to believe in their mission and to understand that their stories, while working in a difficult field, matter so very much to society.” Hopkins has also begun a non-profit organization, Reclamation Movement, Inc., to develop a national action strategy to unite a variety of community, civic, government, and faith-based organizations. The desire to do better by his community still burns within Evans Hopkins, fired now by hope and a belief in the future. .: 15


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