Quotes
“Joshua Colangelo-Bryan’s Through the Gates of Hell speaks with great open-heartedness and compassion about some of the victims of the American injustice in the first decade of this century, but it’s also extremely relevant to where we find ourselves now. These pages are not only deeply moving but urgently necessary.” Rick Moody, author of Hotels of North America
“The brutality of Guantanamo detention and the labyrinthine US legal system stacked against detainees make the relationship between a New York lawyer and a Guantanamo detainee inherently fraught. Joshua Colangelo-Bryan describes with touching sensitivity and humility the process of building trust and ultimately a friendship. The close relationship motivates his relentless and creative quest to free his client. A powerful lesson in empathetic, strategic lawyering.” Kenneth Roth, author of Righting Wrongs
“Wary, skeptical, with his own backstory of upheaval, a young attorney returns again and again to the infamous Guantanamo Bay detention camp where the ‘vicious killers’ he represents are held without charges and have little hope of due process. It is a tale not only of soul-crushing circumstances with catch-22-like protocols but also of perseverance, ingenuity, humor, and ultimately friendship. Be prepared to lose sleep with this tightly written, unexpectedly moving page-turner!” Juliette Fay, author of The Half of It
“In Through the Gates of Hell, Josh Colangelo-Bryan chronicles his struggle to free Jaber Mohammed, known as prisoner #361. Representing Jaber is difficult because he is one of the suspected terrorists being held in Guantanamo Bay. The book is filled with drama, empathy, and even moments of humor. Colangelo-Bryan takes the reader inside one of the least accessible prisons on earth, and emerges with a story that transforms Jaber’s life, as well as his own.” Robert S. Boynton, director of the Literary Reportage program at NYU’s Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute
“Of the many Guantanamo stories, few are so well told. This is a tale—beautifully written—of a volunteer lawyer confronting an offshore prison’s powerful mythology, of legal crumbs begrudged to him by the courts, and most poignantly of a client’s acute depression and its nearly horrific result. Nearly so: But with no quit in him, the author held fast to the peculiar idea that some good might come of his work. And it did. A wonderful and inspiring book.” Sabin Willett, attorney; author of Abide with Me
“When you pick up a book written by a lawyer for Guantanamo detainees, knowing that it will contain an account of his work representing those clients, the last thing you expect to find is a love story. And yet, when a movie version of this book is made, the bromance between Joshua Colangelo-Bryan and Jaber Muhammed will surely be highlighted.” The Massachusetts Review