EXECUTED 2
Every Woman Executed In USA Since 1900
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
This title uses virtual voice narration
This second volume picks up where the first left off, widening the frame on a hard question: what does it mean when the United States chooses to kill a woman in the name of the law. Women remain statistical outliers on death row and in the execution chamber, yet their cases sit at the crossroads of motive, method, race, class, and the stories a community tells to make sense of violence. Here we move beyond the most cited headlines to the quieter files and the stubborn details that complicate simple narratives.
Each chapter centers a single case and then steps back: to the courtroom where strategy, prejudice, and procedure collide; to the governor’s office where clemency is weighed; to the press gallery where labels are minted; to the kitchens and porches where families absorb the blow. Along the way we trace patterns that recur across decades, profit killings and poison, accomplice liability that becomes leadership in a prosecutor’s telling, claims of self defense that juries refuse to believe and we attend to the exceptions that resist any tidy theory.
The work is grounded in trial transcripts, appellate opinions, clemency petitions, prison ledgers, newspaper morgues, and, where possible, letters and oral histories. We aim to hold two truths at once: every victim deserves to be remembered as more than a name, and every person the state executed had a life larger than the worst thing they did or were said to have done. If the first volume mapped a landscape, this one walks deeper into its ravines, asking not for verdicts but for clarity, proportion, and care.