And Still I Rise

And Still I Rise

by Doreen Lawrence (Author)

Synopsis

'This book for me is a warning as well as a reminder. May you never experience what I have experienced.' In April 1993, Stephen Lawrence was murdered by a group of young white men on a street in south-east London. From the first police investigation onwards, the case was badly mishandled. In the end, long after the case against the five suspects had been dropped, the government had to give in to mounting pressure and hold a public inquiry, which became the most explosive in British legal history. These facts leave the reader unprepared for Doreen Lawrence's own story of her son's murder. In this raw, honest book, she writes frankly about her childhood, about her struggle for a decent life for herself and her children and her hopes for her bright, motivated son. Her account of the murder and the botched and insensitive investigation by the Metropolitan Police is deeply moving. She recreates the pain, frustration and bafflement she experienced as she realised that there might never be a moment when she could say to herself that justice had been done. It offers a cold case review led to the discovery of DNA evidence in 2009. In November 2011, two of the alleged members of the gang that killed Stephen were finally brought to trial at the Old Bailey. A guilty verdict was pronounced on 3 January 2012. To be put alongside Nelson Mandela's Long Walk to Freedom or the works of Maya Angelou. (Andrew Billen, The Times).

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Edition: Main
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Published: 15 Jun 2006

ISBN 10: 0571227546
ISBN 13: 9780571227549
Book Overview: In And Still I Rise by Doreen Lawrence, the mother of Stephen Lawrence tells - in her own words and for the first time - the heartbreaking story of her son's murder and how she fought to change the British criminal justice system forever.

Author Bio
Doreen Lawrence was born in Jamaica in 1952. She came to England aged nine and went to school in south-east London. In 1972, while working in a bank, she married Neville Lawrence. Since the murder of her son Stephen in 1993, she has campaigned for justice for Stephen and for other victims of racially motivated crime, as well as for police reform. In 2003 she was awarded an OBE for services to community relations. In addition to her work at the Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust, she sits on panels within the Home Office and the Police Service, and she is a member of both the board and the council of Liberty, the human rights organization.