We understand that many people would like to become involved in helping prisoners. The reasons vary, and the abilities are diverse.

We recommend that the first step not be taken unless you are really serious. The dedication required is not for the faint-hearted.

We began Prison Book Project with the goal of delivering 1,000 books into the local county jail. That was before we understood the need; that goal was discarded when we came to understand the need.

Your local community has the hidden resources to satisfy the local requirements. You don’t have to get as carried away as we did, but you do have to be willing to devote time and resources to getting the job done. We will try to show you how.

  1. Getting started—A fair knowledge of books is necessary. We are trying to change lives for the better, not accidentally plant destructive seeds. We need to know the kinds of ideas that are contained in the material that we feed to these impressionable minds. It is important, however, that we do not reject any material without knowledge of what they contain. An example is “clean westerns.” In westerns, there is a certain amount of violence that some (including me, before God explained the big picture to me) would automatically reject. Applying the “big picture” concept puts a different light on the subject. In a clean western, the good guy gets the pretty girl, the fastest horse and a really nice ranch. The bad guy gets gut shot or hung. This is a moral lesson that is portrayed in a manner which can be easily understood. In the Bible these kinds of lessons are called parables. If Jesus used fiction to teach a moral principle, we can too.
  2. Contact your local jail officials and explain what you propose to do. Your mission is not to make all the jail inmates Baptist or some other denomination, it is to supply the jail officials with “constructive”, instead of “destructive“, reading material. The inmates are the wards of the jail officials; it is their responsibility to provide for the people in their charge. We suggest that you try to provide 50% Christian material and 50% non-religious, constructive material. Keeping minds busy lessens the behavioral problems inherent in people who have been incarcerated.
  3. Only one group should be formed for each community. Working with your local confinement officials will help to coordinate the various volunteer groups. There is enough work to go around.
  4. Collecting: