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Mainline Mama

A Memoir

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

A powerful exploration of self-resilience, family, and community from activist and prison abolitionist Keeonna Harris.

Keeonna and Jason met as young teens. Only fourteen, Keeonna had never had a boyfriend before, dreamed of attending Spelman to become an obstetrician, and thought she was "grown." Within a year she was pregnant and Jason was in prison, convicted of a carjacking and sentenced to twenty-two years. Overnight Keeonna had become a "mainline mama," a parent facing the task of raising a child—while still growing up herself—with an incarcerated partner.

In this triumphant memoir, Keeonna recalls her challenging journey as a mainline mama, from learning to overcome the exhausting difficulties of navigating the carceral system in the United States to transforming herself into an advocate for women like her—the predominantly Black and Brown women left behind to pick up the pieces of their families and fractured lives.

Keeonna speaks frankly about the forces that threatened to defeat her, how she learned to re - build her broken relationship with a mother who had lost trust in her, and how time eased the shame, guilt, and stigma of being a young Black teen mom with a partner behind bars. She offers inspiration and solace, showing how to create moments of beauty, humanity, and love—such as picking the perfect wedding dress for a ceremony in a state prison visiting room—in a place de - signed to break spirits.

Mainline Mama is about creating self-love and community—crucial acts of radical resistance against a prison industrial complex designed to dehumanize and to separate and shut away incarcerated individuals and their loved ones from the world.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from December 2, 2024
      In this stunning debut account, Harris, a PEN America Writing for Justice Fellow, discusses raising a child while her husband was incarcerated. Growing up in Los Angeles’s Watts neighborhood in the 1980s, Harris harbored dreams of becoming an obstetrician. She got pregnant in ninth grade, however, and shortly after her son’s birth, the father, Jason, was sentenced to more than 20 years in prison for gang-related crimes. Harris regularly visited and wrote to Jason, and the couple got married while he was still behind bars. In evocative prose, Harris illuminates the experience of coming to “know prisons like a close relative,” bonding with other women whose partners were imprisoned, and learning how to maintain her connection with Jason while building a meaningful life apart from him and completing a degree in women’s studies. Harris frames her narrative with revealing letters to herself (“To the outside world, you look good.... People assume you’re some magical Negro because you don’t look crazy, your kids aren’t locked up, and Jason got out of prison and now works a regular job”) that provide unflinching insight into the plight of women in her position. This affecting dispatch from inside the carceral state is not to be missed. Agent: PJ Mark, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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