Posts Tagged ‘ World

Sex Offender Lives Here: The Perils of Wearing the ‘Scarlet Letter’ in an Instant-Access, Socially Networked World

Middletown, NJ (PRWEB) February 25, 2009

In 1994, when the first “Megan’s Law” mandated the creation of a publicly accessible database for the tracking of convicted sex felons, the world was a very different place. There was no Google, no Facebook, no massive global interlinkage of RSS feeds and Twitter updates. In short, it wasn’t possible to whip up an angry mob of tens or even hundreds of thousands of people in mere moments.

Now all it takes is a few key taps. When an anonymous man was charged with setting wildfires that killed as many as 200 people in southern Australia, various media swiftly identified the alleged arson via his social-networking profile. Within hours, 4,000 people had joined a Facebook group named “Brendan Sokaluk, the Victorian Bushfires Arsonist, must burn in hell.” Many thousands more posted threatening messages, while another group placed “$ 10,000 on Brendan Sokaluk’s head.” While his guilt or innocence, and his intentions, if any, are still to be determined, Sokaluk is being held by Australian authorities in a secret location, for his own safety.

Sex offenders are familiar with Sokaluk’s plight. (Indeed, Sokaluk has also been charged with possessing child pornography.) Recently three teenage boys in Greensburg, PA were charged with possession of child pornography after friends of theirs, girls 14 and 15 years of age, sent them nude cellphone snapshots of themselves. This incident, part of a new phenomenon called “sexting,” is greatly widening the scope and impact of current sex offender legislation. In this case, each teen faced the very real possibility of being branded sex offenders for life. Registered sex offender status has entirely predictable consequences on employability and quality of life, while incidents of stalking and vigilantism against registered sex felons have become increasingly commonplace in recent years.

It was exactly this highly charged atmosphere surrounding sex offender monitoring and punishment that intrigued Harry Ramble as he set out to write a different kind of sex offender thriller. That novel, Sex Offender Lives Here, now available from Ebb Press, has elicited strong–even angry–responses from readers.

“When people find out what Sex Offender Lives Here is about, usually the first thing they say is, well, who cares what happens to sex offenders? They’ve got it coming, right?” Ramble says. “People are conditioned to accept a single approach to the issue. For the most part, it’s “Silence of the Lambs” stuff. Unspeakable evil. Sociopathic killing machines.

“Sometimes it seems there’s a complete disconnect between the reality of who and what sex offenders are, and what we’d like them to be. We don’t like to hear about shades of gray when it comes to something as viscerally disturbing as sex crimes. We want perpetrators to be irretrievably evil and we want to protect the children. We lock criminals up for a while and then we return them to society with big targets on their backs. Now don’t get me wrong, some people should be targeted, identified, monitored. Some people are evil. But the system is so inflexible and one-size-fits-all.”

Sex Offender Lives Here is a fictional account of a husband and father who is charged with a series of terrible crimes in the course of a hostile child custody case. Even as the father fights for possession of his son, his situation is publicized, resulting in unrest in his community. Soon activists, ideologues, and vigilantes on both sides of a cultural divide join the fray. With unnerving swiftness, the father finds himself at ground zero in a pitched battle between an agitated, frightened citizenry and a shadowy underground of deviants and criminals. Finally, the disappearance of a local 10-year-old girl triggers a final, deadly escalation of violence.

“The initial idea for Sex Offender Lives Here came from a story I read a few years ago,” Harry Ramble says. “A 20-year-old dishwasher from Canada used the sex-registry system to track down and kill convicted felons in Maine. He killed two people. One was a 57-year-old man who had been convicted of assaulting and raping a child younger than 14 years old. The second was a 24-year-old man who had been convicted, when he was 19, of having sex with his girlfriend who, at the time, had been two weeks short of her 16th birthday. They were both sex offenders and they were both registered by name, address, and photo. The killer was found in possession of the addresses of 32 more sex offenders. You can talk all you want about who’s got what coming, but this is the world we live in now. There’s an inequity there.

“It’s ironic,” Ramble continues, “but there’s a very peripheral character in the novel, a stereotypical sex fiend who exists outside the narrative and is kind of influencing public opinion around some of the main characters. And I can’t tell you how many people say to me, why don’t you write a book about that guy? Heck, they say, I’d read that. That fiend, a kind of supernatural fiend called the Balloon Man, represents how we like to think about sex felons.”

Sex Offender Lives Here doesn’t offer any solutions to the inequities in the sex offender registry system. Indeed, If anything, it represents a first tentative–and fictional–effort to arrive at a new way of speaking about the issues involved.

“I’m not an expert,” Ramble says. “I’m a novelist. But it doesn’t take an expert to recognize that we don’t really have a coherent way of thinking or talking about sex offenses. I was listening to the radio the other day and the Attorney General of Connecticut was talking about sex offenders trolling social networks for kids. MySpace had just banned 90,000 registered sex offenders from its network.

“And the Attorney General said that for every identified sex offender, there could very well be hundreds of others out there right now, using fake names. And I’m thinking to myself, okay, say by ‘hundreds’ he means two hundred. That’s 18 million sex offenders. And no one questioned this assertion. But I’m thinking, is that what he really means? If there are 18 million sex offenders out there, then what exactly is a sex offender?”

Interested readers can find more information at ebbpress.com, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other reputable booksellers.

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The new World War II novel issues that affect Black History Month

Princeton, NJ (PRWEB) February 1, 2012

celebration of February as Black History Month 1960 is more than remembering slavery and the civil rights movement. The Second World War was a very important time in African-American struggle for recognition as equal parts of the nation who said they believed in freedom for all. SEFRIN Eliot explores the irony of the country to war in the fight against racism and oppression in Europe, while discriminating against a segment of the population in the blood of his new novel The Promised Land (ISBN 9781462026104, iUniverse, 2011).


Tags: Set in 1943 at the height of World War II, the blood in the Promised Land records two separate paths Menon poor black immigrant who flees from the Jim Crow South to work in the booming steel industry Pittsburghs, and other Jewish doctor forced to flee from Nazi-occupied Europe. When their paths through randomly during an outbreak of racial violence, their fateful meeting immediately form their lives to enable them to overcome their differences and exorcise the ghosts of his past. Their relationship is almost finally puts at the beginning of the civil rights movement as they courageously join forces to combat terrorist groups because they hate having their haunted past.


Tags Roosevelt Turner is black sharecroppers orphan with dreams of a better life in the north. Storylike him on his Jewish counterpart, Jacob Perlmanfollows plotline of numerous historical points of contact. Roosevelts childhood is based on real events that happened in Rosewood, Floridaan all-black town destroyed by an explosion of racial violence in 1920. Roosevelts adolescence and young adulthood are governed by Jim Crow, lynchings, mob rule, and other forms of institutionalized racism that existed in the Depression era Gainesville. His dream of the promised northern utopiaor Landwas prevalent throughout Europe as the blacks were recruited to work with representatives of northern promises of good jobs, living conditions and civil liberties, while the southern business interests dependent on cheap black labor, conspiracy, tied blacks to the south.


Roosevelts

experiences during his six-month odyssey mirror those legions of rural blacks who fled south to find employment protection and a better life in the northern industrial cities during World War II IIand team whose path eventually changed the face of America. The north face of fanaticism in the sign of stress in the workplace, hate strikes, terrorist groups and hate, which require the implementation of the traditional barriers of race, blacks had to seize the unique opportunity to remake War South, poor white parsing rule and achieve permanent entry in the blue-collar professions, upwardly mobile.


Blood

Promised Land reminds readers that the United States is a melting pot in which the black experience, and a Jew, is an important part of its history. SEFRIN states of the novel, I wanted to tell the stories of two people who are opposite in terms of race, religion, education, and roots, and yet find commonalities that ultimately assemble them together into a single, bold, life-changing quest. people need to look beyond the obvious differences to overcome the stereotypes that often determine who they are, and try to form alliances to achieve the common good. Black History Month is an ideal opportunity to explore through the novel, how diversity is reflected in the United States and made it stronger by continuing the work of those who fought for freedom for allregardless race, color, sex or religion.


Tags: About the Author

SEFRIN Eliot was a journalist and magazine editor and publisher for more than thirty years. A native of Brooklyn, graduated from City College of New York and lives near Princeton, NJ. Blood in the Promised Land is his third novel.


Blood

Promised Land (ISBN 978146202610-4, iUniverse, 2011) can be purchased through local bookstores and online. For more information visit http://www.EliotSefrin.com. Publicity Contact: http://www.ReaderViews.com. Review copies available on request.


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