Books

Having spent my professional career writing academic textbooks and monographs, I am now enjoying writing trade books. In 2024, I published a memoir,  An Architecture of Hope: Reimagining the Prison, Restoring a House, Rebuilding Myself, which was Scribe Publications’ nonfiction title of the year.

I had wanted to write a book about my professional life researching prisons, interviewing prisoners, and advising architects on the design of humane, healing and rehabilitative custodial environments for many years. It felt quite brave (or foolhardy) to interweave my professional career with a narrative about my personal life, but what emerged was a story that starts with the question what are prisons for? and broadens it to a much wider reflection on the importance of environment and the meaning of home.

The book underlines my belief that confinement takes many forms – we may experience it in relationships, in our homes, in our bodies, habits and addictions, as well as in prisons as we conventionally think of them. But An Architecture of Hope is ultimately a book about finding freedom, which also comes in many guises.

The book has been described by Andy West (author of ‘A Life Inside’) as a book full of insights to illuminate the way we look at architecture…a beautiful meditation on the universal need for sanctuary, what it means when it is taken away from us, and the courage it takes to reclaim it; by Jennie Godfrey (author of ‘The List of Suspicious Things’) as a deeply vulnerable, beautifully written personal memoir…deftly interwoven with literature, philosophy, and prison architecture; playing with ideas of home, family, imprisonment, and what it means to be free; by Professor Lady Sue Black, Baroness Black of Strome (author of All That Remains: A Life in Death), as a life affirming personal and professional narrative that teaches us all what it is like to be human; and by Kit de Waal (author of ‘My Name is Leon’) as a fascinating examination of how bricks and mortar affects our lives and the people we imprison in them. Beautifully written, honest, and clever, this is a book we should all read.

My next book, Knowing Nick, is a collaboration with a life-sentenced prisoner. It tells the story of Nick’s life, what it has been like to spend 21 years in prison and how he turned his life around at HMP Grendon. It is also the story of our unusual friendship and what we have come to learn about ourselves, as well as each other, in the course of our relationship.