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The Sudan Curse goes to prison


Recently I read about The Prison Library Project in California, established in 1973.

The Prison Library Project is a volunteer organization that supplies books free of charge to any inmate who requests them. The PLP aims to provide an ongoing invitation to prisoners to embrace personal responsibility, growth, and a deeper appreciation for the world of books, ideas, and education. In 2009, the Project sent over 30,000 books to individuals in prisons all over the United States. Each week the Project receives about 200 letters, some from inmates who are writing for the first time and others who have written for several years. The books are for inmates to keep and are frequently passed on to other inmates or prison libraries.The Prison Library Project is a clearinghouse through which new, used, overstocked, or defective books are donated by publishers, bookstores, and individuals from all over the country. The prison Library Project continues to grow and gain attention world-wide. They have expanded to include recovery groups, homes for abused women and children, and veterans.


I have contributed to the Prison Library Project by donating copies of The Sudan Curse to men's and women's prison libraries and correctional services libraries across Australia.

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