The Deserving
What the Lives of the Condemned Reveal About American Justice
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Elizabeth Vartkessian
A groundbreaking new take on the American justice system from one of its unknown revolutionaries, offering a powerful new vision of responsibility, punishment, and repair.
"The first book I’m aware of to pull back the curtain on a life-saving field most have never heard of: mitigation." --Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking, from the foreword
Elizabeth Vartkessian works with criminal defense teams as a mitigation specialist. She isn’t part of the Innocence Project; her clients are often legally guilty, and often of terrible crimes. Rather, her job is to spend hundreds of hours per case talking to the parents, siblings, teachers, and neighbors of a defendant, situating their crimes in context.
Founder and director of nonprofit mitigation team Advancing Real Change Inc., Vartkessian weaves powerful, gripping stories from her extraordinary career into an inspiring argument for dignity in American justice. Her unique experience has taught her that when personal or generational trauma enters the body, it finds its way out eventually, sometimes through violence. She contends that we cannot hold her clients solely responsible for their actions, nor can we continue to stomach harsh penalties that deny real justice to perpetrators and victims alike.
Amid the Trump administration’s record-high executions and calls to expand the use of the death penalty after decades of progress, The Deserving is required reading for a dangerous new era of rollbacks. Vartkessian offers a compelling, hope-filled vision of true rehabilitation replacing retribution.©2026 Elizabeth Vartkessian (P)2026 Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
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Recensioni della critica
Time and again through powerful case studies, Vartkessian illustrates that violence is not an inherent trait. Rather, it is seeded in early development by trauma, abuse or neglect . . . Like mercy, connection is harder to conjure than vengeance or detachment, but The Deserving makes it clear that a safe and functional society relies on people’s ability to do that hard work.
What makes this book especially compelling is that it goes beyond explaining the field of mitigation and asks deeper moral questions: Who is deserving of mercy and redemption? What information does someone need to make such a judgment, and should we be making those judgments at all? It also asks whether the death penalty itself can ever be just . . . The Deserving is a thoughtful and important read for anyone interested in criminal justice reform.
When we think about the crimes that draw the harshest punishments, the first question people ask is, 'How could someone do that?' But we rarely stay long enough to hear the real answer. In stories shaped by history, childhood harm, and pain passed down across generations, Vartkessian shows how people once full of promise can be pulled into cycles of violence and loss. The Deserving asks a simple, urgent question: will we wait for prison to respond to suffering, or will we care for our children before the hurt takes root? Real justice begins with listening. This book shows us what that looks like.
Elizabeth Vartkessian writes about death row like a detective crossed with a philosopher, propelling us one revelation at a time into a richer understanding of how violence begets violence. So many books and movies try to tell us why people harm and kill each other. We're always flashing back to the villain's childhood. But too often we give up and shrug off some people as monsters. Vartkessian offers a new, courageous vision for a society with less violence and more mercy, through an honest reckoning with how we fail the least among us.
In The Deserving, Elizabeth Vartkessian writes with clarity and compassion about the condemned—about their lives on American death rows, about the traumatic lives they led before landing there, and about capital litigation and the mysterious, little-known world of the "mitigation specialist.’ From her first visit to Texas’s death row at age 23 to becoming a leader in her field, she pulls back the curtain on capital punishment and cruelty, American execution chambers, and the country’s criminal and juvenile justice systems.
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