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On The Table Read Magazine, “the best book magazine in the UK“, author Stephen Jackley shares the inspiration behind his new book, JUST TIME: A Journey Through Britain’s Fractured Justice System.
I interviewed Stephen Jackley about his life and career, the research that went into his new book, JUST TIME: A Journey Through Britain’s Fractured Justice System, and why he was inspired to write it.
I am an editor and project coordinator for the Arkbound Foundation and passionate about supporting people from the most diverse and disadvantaged backgrounds to have their voices heard. I’ve helped mentor people from these backgrounds to achieve publication and also develop sustainable social enterprise ideas. I’m also very active with environmental projects linked to tackling climate change.
I have enjoyed writing since a child and think writing a book has always been something I wanted to do, perhaps since the age of seven. I can remember an elderly friend of my father’s, John, who was in the process of writing a book about Dartmoor – an area I loved to explore as a child – and he was the first writer who inspired me to do something similar.
I kept diaries and wrote poetry when young, but it was only after receiving input from a creative writing tutor that I got properly into it, around the age of 23.
I have written several books that have never been published, so if you count the first one of those then it took around three months. That book was a sci-fi type story. But my first book that was actually published, Good Intentions, took about six months to write.
Most of the writing process is actually re-writing; the actual creation part where you are writing from scratch onto paper (I find doing this directly on a computer very hard) usually takes me less than a month.
My latest published book, Just Time, took a whopping seven years from first idea to release. There were lots of reasons for that, from having reservations about publishing certain things that could negatively impact me, to working with various people in the process.
I always wanted to publish the account of my time in UK custody. It was something I vowed to do when in prison, as I felt there were certain essential things that the public should be aware of. Prisons are very rarely shown in a complete, accurate way, and most ‘insider’ accounts don’t really cover certain key themes that I wanted to be understood. For example, there are not really any accounts that depict the huge variations in conditions between multiple establishments, how liable to corruption, abuse of power and maladministration the system can be, together with how important it is for people in custody to access the courts as a means of last resort.
As the book is a first-hand account of being in prison and self-representation in the courts, most research was centered on checking the numbers cited were correct (such as number of prisoners, suicides in a certain year, number of judicial reviews brought, etc).
It was planned chronologically, though I did experiment with a more thematic structure that was suggested to me.
Although I work as an editor and have written previous books, it is unwise to edit one’s own work. Thus, I had help from an editor and proofreader, as well as having an experienced literary agent look over it.
To read. The more you read, the more you will pick up certain styles and techniques that work – and don’t work. At the same time, it is important to read with an eye on how sentences are structured, rather than getting lost in the story.
I like writing fantasy and sci-fi, and have written several books in these themes (most not to the end). So the next book I write will probably be a continuation of that trend. Whether I’ll publish it or not is another matter.
‘Pride’ is a difficult sentiment for such a book, but I’m glad that it finally got published. The vow I made to expose certain things in the justice system can finally be seen as fulfilled, though I wish it got published earlier.
JUST TIME: a Journey through Britain’s Fractured Justice System
by Stephen Jackley (paperback, £12,99) is published by Arbound Foundation –
a charitable social enterprise – and is available through booksellers and through the publisher’s website:
arkbound.com/product/just-time-by-stephen-jackley
Kindle: https://amzn.to/3tlIPR3
For more information about Arkbound publishing, visit the website:
www.arkbound.com/about or connect with Arkbound on social media:
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