Mother California
A Story of Redemption Behind Bars
"A magnificent inquiry into the human condition." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
In 1980, Kenneth Hartman murdered a homeless man in a Los Angeles park after a drug-fueled binge. Sentenced to life without parole by the state of California, Hartman was soon considered a potent force by the system’s most brutal convicts. To the hellish chaos of a maximum-security prison he brought his own limitless propensity for violence—he often spent months at a time in solitary confinement, “the Hole.”
After years in the cold embrace of the state prison system, Hartman discovered a vocation for writing; he also met, through a chance phone call, the woman he would marry and have a child by. With poignancy and self awareness, Hartman chronicles the anarchy and brutish moral code that rules in some of the world’s most infamous prisons, where physical punishment is the only form of control. Over time, Hartman evolves into a sentient being; follows his newly discovered spiritual and literary inclinations; and learns to deal with his demanding responsibilities as a family man. The final chapter describes his development of the Honor Program, which helps motivated prisoners escape the ravages of incarceration.
Mother California is the story of a man who did not succumb to the darkness of the only world left to him. It offers definite proof that there is no such thing as a life beyond redemption.
Click here for Hartman's New York Times Op-Ed, "The Recession Behind Bars"
Click here for his piece, "The Power of Books in Prison," published at the Huffington Post
“An illuminating, unflinching, self-portrait of a life behind bars. . . . Raw. Searing. Brutal.” —Erik Jensen co-author (with Jessica Blank) of The Exonerated
"Whether you've lived inside the walls of prison or never even seen the interior of a courtroom, this book is essential reading. Written in a straightforward style with unflinching honesty, Mother California is one of those rarities that will stay with you for years." — Kim Wozencraft, author of the novel Rush


