Praise for Confessions of an Innocent Man "Every person wrongfully convicted of a crime at some point dreams of getting revenge against the system. In
Confessions of an Innocent Man, the dream comes true and in a spectacular way. As I zipped through the pages, I kept thinking, 'This book is too thin. I want more.' "
--John Grisham, New York Times bestselling author of The Reckoning "Mr. Dow [is] a born writer if ever there was one."
--The Wall Street Journal "Suppose you were arrested, tried, and sentenced to die for a murder you didn't commit, then vindicated and freed at the last possible minute. What would you do? Would you try to go back to the old life you'd nearly lost? Or would you punish those who'd stolen it from you? In
Confessions of an Innocent Man, David R. Dow, who knows more about death row than any other person who's never lived there, puts you in the place of a victim of the system whose soul has been shriveled by rage, then invites you to take a look in the mirror. The result is a terrifying modern-day revenger's tale, one whose furious, irresistible momentum will sweep you up--and make you think."
--Terry Teachout, drama critic for The Wall Street Journal "An impressive fiction debut. . . . The plot is a page-turner, and the addition of Dow's knowledge of the legal machinery of death and his nuanced characterization of his lead elevate this above similarly themed legal thrillers."--
Publishers Weekly (starred review) "A debut novel that's a page-turner with a message. . . . [Dow's] criminal justice work is a clear influence on this novel, and his passion bleeds through on every page. The claustrophobic nature of prisons, the routine cruelty, the anonymous suffering, the decrepit conditions--they all come through in straightforward, well-written prose. . . . A solidly suspenseful novel."
--Kirkus Reviews "This thought-provoking debut . . . [an] absorbing tale of misfortune takes readers inside the mind of a good man who's desperate to prove his innocence as well as inside the world of a maximum-security prison and the horror that is death row. . . . The questions of who gets justice and why court procedure seems to take such precedence over individual lives will stay with readers after the satisfying ending to this surprising read."--
Booklist