praise for the book:

The staggering toll of human misery that unfold in these pages is more than sobering; it is terrifying. The authors' plea for restorative justice shows that there are constructive strategies and tactics within our reach if only the will and the funding are available to implement them. – Hugo Adam Bedau, Tufts University

This is an important book that lifts the concept of restorative justice off its pages and into the hearts and minds of all who will read it. Beck, Britto, and Andrews have given us the tools; now it is up to us to take it to the people. – Ajamu Baraka, US Human Rights Network

Using restorative justice as analytic framework, In the Shadow of Death lifts the needs and experiences of those family members out of the shadows and explores their place in the justice equation. – Howard Zehr, Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, Eastern Mennonite University

The family members of those sentenced to death have been either vilified or ignored. This book makes an enormous step toward changing that by presenting some of their compelling stories and making their voices part of the debate about capital punishment and about our commitment to a just, decent, and compassionate society. – Stephen Bright, Southern Center for Human Rights

By boldly proposing the application of restorative justice principles to capital crimes, the authors provide hope that we can break the cycle of violence and make some good come out of the devastation murder brings to victims and offenders families, and even the offenders themselves and society in general. As one of two children (my brother is the other) in American history to have had both parents executed, I applaud this effort. – Robert Meeropol, son of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg and Executive Director, Rosenberg Fund for Children

The death penalty is often seen as "the big fix." Timothy McVeigh's execution did not bring my daughter Julie back or fix anything. This book recognizes how "the big fix" mentality is dramatically oversimplified and honestly discusses the consequences of murder to victims' family members and of the death penalty to offenders' family members. – Bud Welch, Murder Victim Families for Human Rights

This is a must-read for anyone involved in the mental health profession as well as attorneys and law students who enter the mire of these broken lives. This book unearths the humanity that is often missing in death penalty trials. – Scharlette Holdman, Center for Capital Assistance

This book should be required reading for professionals who work with persons who suffer from the wrongdoing of family members and for anyone considering whether the net benefit of the death penalty outweighs its costs.Sheri Lynn Johnson, Cornell Death Penalty Project

Praise