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403 pages, ebook
First published November 9, 2021
*5++++ stars*
is the kind of book you finish then wonder “now what could I read that would top that?�
“When you see something that is not right, not just, not fair, you have a moral obligation to say something.�
“The condemned man was offered his final words.
‘I’m innocent and they all know it.�
Korn knew it. And he didn’t care. He didn’t become a prosecutor in a death-penalty state to concern himself with guilt or innocence. It was the system that appealed to him. Justice was simply a cloak he wore to disguise his true nature.�
“I knew this case would take something from me. Some cases just cost a piece of you, something you won’t ever get back. Sometimes it’s a little piece. Sometimes it’s a big piece. The more I read, the more I was willing to pay the price.�
“Korn had an unusual distaste for human life in general. He told himself it didn’t really matter what color his victims were. They all screamed and died the same. Yet, the underlying racism of authority in the South was ever present. He’d seen it his whole career. But this was the first time he’d heard it spoken aloud in a more public conversation. This wasn’t a whispered discussion among two conspirators. It was out in the open now. The silence which followed the statement was not uncomfortable. If anything, it felt natural for it to come out in the open now, in these times.�