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OverviewMatthew Avery Solomon and Noel Espinoza were murdered on September 4, 2008. Three men were charged with the crime. In What Is Justice?: A Personal Exploration, author Bill Denham studies the crime and what it reveals about himself and about our broader culture's pursuit of retributive justice. Incorporating poetry, philosophy, theology, and memoir, Denham suggests an alternative system borne out of our inter-connectedness and reliant on the exercise of our imaginations. What Is Justice?: A Personal Exploration is an engaging, deeply personal, and deeply felt exploration into the meaning of justice. It is an essential and thought-provoking piece. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bill DenhamPublisher: Fernwood Press Imprint: Fernwood Press Dimensions: Width: 12.70cm , Height: 0.40cm , Length: 20.30cm Weight: 0.086kg ISBN: 9781594980572ISBN 10: 1594980578 Pages: 72 Publication Date: 05 April 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsWrestling with grief over the killing of a boy he loved as a son, Denham confronts his own impulses to condemn the ones who murdered him. With the courage to perform open-heart surgery on himself, Denham returns again and again to restorative justice as the only way forward. A solemn read, a quiet contemplation, a hopeful longing, What Is Justice? is a respite for anyone committed to labors of love and justice. Valarie Kaur, Founder of the Revolutionary Love Project There is a murder; there is a pending execution. There are victims and there are perpetrators. Into the midst of these deep contradictions, Bill Denham plunges with his honest, searing, hope-filled poetry. He dares to imagine that we are all bound together in this human crisis as one. We are not over-against ; we are rather with and belonging to. That solidarity evokes compassion that presses toward restorative justice and away from revenge. Denham sees that it falls to me to do justice. Indeed, it falls to me and you and you and you. Those who enter Denham's world of poetic imagination may be called to care in transformative ways. It is his hope. Indeed, it is our hope! Walter Brueggemann Columbia Theological Seminary What does it mean to love our enemies? I know of no better answer in our time than the care Bill Denham shows the men who killed his stepson. With vulnerability and courage, he uses a poet's ear and a prophet's eye to redefine justice. His story moved me deeply. Bruce Murphy, retired as President at Northwestern College, a former Pastor at La Jolla Presbyterian Church and Bethany Presbyterian Church Bill Denham has given us a gift in a few short pages. As he shares his experience of losing someone he loves to violent death, he invites us to accompany him as he searches his own heart and enters as he can into another's experience. The insights he gathers into his poetry, prose, and the quotations he incorporates challenge us to do the hard work of subverting the systems that numb us by learning compassion for the other. Becky Ankeny, Ph.D. Recorded minister in Sierra-Cascades Yearly Meeting of Friends After the 2008 gang-related murder of his stepson, Bill Denham embarked on ten years of deep and profoundly revealing self-examination. This book is a compelling account of the results of that questioning. Here, in both prose and poems, Denham voices an impassioned plea for replacing our retributive justice system with restorative justice. Avowing that true justice must come from an honest and humble place, he bears wise and eloquent witness to the excruciatingly hard work of forgiveness and reconciliation. Paulann Petersen Oregon Poet Laureate Emerita Author InformationBill Denham, educated at Davidson College in North Carolina (BA in English 1963) and at the University of California (MA in English 1967), began writing poetry at the age of sixty after a forty-year hiatus from his youthful passion. He has written nearly 800 poems and has published three volumes of poetry, Looking for Matthew (2012), of gossamers and grace (2016) and death will come (2018). A long dramatic dialogue with his special needs son, Do you remember, Dad? appeared in the anthology, Daring to Repair (Wising Up Press, 2012). He lives in Portland, Oregon, with his wife, June, a former high school classmate in Winston-Salem, NC. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |