Stitching Freedom: A True Story of Injustice, Defiance, and Hope in Angola Prison
By (Author) Gary Tyler
With Ellen Bravo
Atria Books
Atria Books
14th October 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
Crime and criminology
Criminal procedure
Hardback
288
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 19mm
481g
In the tradition of books by Albert Woodfox and Angela Davis comes the gripping memoir of a wrongful conviction and life on death row in Angola prison, showing how incarcerated people care for, protect, mentor, and teach each other.
In 1975, seventeen-year-old Gary Tyler was sent to Angola prison to die. A year earlier, he had been wrongfully charged with the killing of a white teenager and found guilty by an all-white jury, making Gary the youngest prisoner on death row in the country.
Following his conviction, Amnesty International and investigative reporters documented the brutal treatment, fabricated evidence, recanted testimony, and repeated injustices that led to his sentencing. Three times Gary was recommended for a pardon; three times Louisiana governors refused to accept the political risk. After more than four decades in prison, Tyler was released in 2016but he was never exonerated.
This is not a story of mistaken identity or circumstantial evidence, but one of systemic injustice from an institution hard-wired into a legacy of slaveryin effect, this was a legal lynching. It is precisely this harsh reality that makes this memoir a remarkable celebration of life and justice, a story of pride, forgiveness, community, and triumph. With insight and heart, Gary shows how he learned to reject bitterness and survive with the help and mentorship from activists such Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace on the inside, and the relentless support from people on the outside. Stitching Freedom is the page-turning chance for Gary to reclaim his power and exonerate himself at last.
Gary Tyler is an artist and a spokesperson for justice. During his years in prison, Tyler galvanized a movement that grew to have national and international support, one of the precursors to todays abolition and Black Lives Matter movements. He was recently awarded the2024 Frieze LA Impact Prize, which recognizes artists who use their talents and abilities to address social justice issues.Stitching Freedomis his first book.
Ellen Bravos connection to Gary Tyler began in July 1976, when she marched with two thousand others in New Orleans demanding his freedom. A long-time activist, Bravohas written three nonfiction books about working women and two novels,Again and Again,about date rape and politics, andStanding Up: Tales of Struggle, about love and organizing.Among Bravos many commendations are the Ford FoundationsVisionary Awardand a Trailblazer award from the Ms. Foundation.