Title: Life After Death
Author: Damien Echols
It’s hard not to bristle with
impotent ire at the injustices meted out to Damien Echols. As the so called
ringleader of the “West Memphis Three”, he withered in an Arkansas death row
cell for 18 years for the supposedly satanic killing of three eight-year-old
boys: a crime he did not commit, of which there was not a scrap of evidence
linking him or his co-accused to and for which he was blatantly set up for by
corrupt police.
What happened next almost reads
like a soap opera storyline, but it was real life – Damien’s real life. A determined woman named Lorri Davis became
first his pen pal, then tireless freedom crusader, then wife. She gave up her New York life to move
near him for visits of just three hours a week – all the while working
relentlessly to clear his name, pulling in global superstars like Sir Peter
Jackson, Johnny Deep and Eddie Vedder to her campaign and in August 2011,
securing his release.
“Life After Death: the shocking
true story of an innocent man on death row,” Damien Echols’ own words, is a
beautiful chameleon. At times his writing takes on a lyrical quality as he
explores his deep nostalgia for winter, his favourite time of year, the comfort
and strength he finds in meditation and prayer or the soul destroying despair
that often threatens to envelope him. He writes:
“It used to be that a certain wrongness danced across the ocean’s
surface, crackling like chain lightening. Now the despair is more subtle,
sinking silently beneath the waves and coming to rest in dark and poisonous
places. The surface becomes pallid
and exudes a sick, gray, greasy feeling that eventually drives you mad. It’s an
endless cycle that breeds a never-ending supply of frustration. Its heartache
in the color of lead, and nothing in the world can heal it.”
At other times he is a masterful
(possibly unintended) comedian, lifting the tragic circumstances of his
imprisonment with comical descriptions of the madder inmates he shares death
row with and their bizarre rituals and behaviours. Still again, his story is also a gritty and
unrelenting expose into the American Penitentiary and the violence and hatred
that is dished out daily and unchecked by prison guards in a system that breeds
dehumanization. As Echols chillingly
writes:
“In the end…if you rolled all the deprivations into one thing, it would
be this: I miss being treated like a human being.”
Whatever he writes about, Echols
is unflinchingly candid. He describes his “white trash” childhood which
included a stint living in a ramshackle hut in the middle of a corn field with
no running water or electricity and that was regularly aerially dusted with
pesticides. He details his unreliable parents,
whose love and attentions were at best hit and miss, and the solace he found
through his difficult teenage years in exploring different religions, dressing in
“goth” style and his love of death metal – unremarkable teenage activities that
would later be used to paint him as the embodiment of evil to a frenzied public
baying for vengeance.
While Echols doesn’t delve into
the details of the tainted evidence or false courtroom testimony at his trial (so
ably explored in first the Paradise Lost documentaries and more recently in
West of Memphis, co-produced by our own Peter Jackson as well as Echols) he does
explore the circumstances of his wrongful arrest and the vendetta against him by
local law enforcement officials. Their relentless and unwarranted pursuit of
him, all of which were the catalyst for what unfolded in the courtroom, makes
for shocking reading, as does that no one – not his family nor his lawyers –
stepped up to help him when he so desperately needed it and couldn’t help
himself.
Echols’ eventual release from
prison, so hard fought for by Lorri and his supporters, came at a terrible cost
- financially, physically, emotionally. And
though now a free man, he ends his story needing closure:
“Ultimately, I know that freedom isn’t enough. I’m a young man, and the
only way all three of us will be able to live the rest of our lives is being
exonerated. I need the person or persons
who murdered those three children, and who put me on Death Row for eighteen
years, found and brought to justice.”
If anyone deserves justice, it’s
those six innocent West Memphis
boys: the three young murder victims and the three wrongly accused and imprisoned.
The deplorable facts of his case,
the lack of nurturing and love in his childhood, the bleak reality he faced for
18 years in death row – all of this could have made “Life After Death” a dark
and disturbing read, and at times it is.
But it is also a beautifully written, intensely compelling read that
doesn’t veer into the morose or self pitying - a testament to the strength of Damien
Echols’ character, the substantive power of his spirituality and the unwavering
love of his amazing wife Lorri.
My thanks to Text Publishing for the review copy.
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