The
Central Park Five: A Chronicle of a City Wilding
by Sarah Burns
Hardcover: 256 pages
Publisher: Knopf (May 17, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0307266141
ISBN-13: 978-0307266149
Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.2 inches
Book Review by Kam Williams
"In 1990, Anton McCray, Kevin Richardson, Korey Wise,
Yusef Salaam and Raymond Santana, Jr. [were] convicted and sent to prison
for a combination of rape, sexual assault and attempted murder of a female
jogger named Trisha Meili in Central Park... That the victim had been a 28
year-old, successful, white investment banker and that the [accused] were
black and Latino teenagers from Harlem was not lost on the public...
The media coverage of the crime exposed a racism rife in American society,
and the language used to describe the supposed perpetrators was filled with
imagery of savage wild animals, the same racist imagery that had been used
to justify lynchings earlier in the century…
The false narrative disseminated by the police and the media was swallowed
whole by the public… Even though some like to say we live in a ‘postracial'
society, the racism that fueled the rush to judgment persists, and… we have
not evolved enough from the days when even the suggestion that a black man
had raped a white woman could lead to a lynching."
-- Excerpted from the Preface (pgs. ix-xi)
On April 19, 1989, Patricia Ellen Meili entered Central Park around 9 PM,
a regular running time for her due to the long hours she worked on Wall
Street. Unfortunately, on this occasion, she would be sadistically beaten,
brutally raped and left for dead, with 80% of the blood draining from her
body by the time she was rushed to the hospital by ambulance after the
police were alerted by a couple of passersby.
Related Links
NPR Story and Excerpt
http://www.npr.org/2011/05/24/135784800/innocence-and-injustice-in-central-park-five