George Hughes

I was born in the nation’s capital in 1943. Education was not my first priority and reading was virgin territory for a kid who has been kicked around most of my life.

I went to reform School in 1959, alias “Six Basement,” and prison several times for bank robbery. In 1983 in federal prison I learned to read and got my G.E.D. A whole new world of literature opened up to me. I read everything I could get my hands on and years later I started to write.

Now 65 years old, again in prison, (damn banks), I write with a passion. The PEN Prison Writing contest kept me motivated to enter each year, among other endeavors. There have been many rejections, a few honorable mentions, and a lot of revisions.

Before “Six Basement” I was in the PEN mentorship program. My mentor was honest about my writing and told me what was good, what was wrong, what needed improvement; made suggestions; and answered questions. More than anyone else she gave me insight into my writing. I learned much from her.


Articles by George Hughes

Prison and Justice Writing
Monday June 29

Six Basement

I was 12 months into my bit in reform school and had caught some kind of awful disease. I had sores all over, with puffy scabs on them. They seem to drain and spread, and my face looked terrible with my whole chin and half my face one big scab. My body was peppered with

Prison and Justice Writing
Thursday May 10

Fair Well

Sunbeams escaped from the free world and drifted into my cell through the bars and laid beside me sharing my bunk in the summer of 1989. It was a depressing time. The Circuit Court had sentenced me to three life sentences plus 34 years without parole, for four bank robberies while displaying a plastic toy