“I can’t stop talking about A Stone of Hope, written by Jim St. Germain and Jon Sternfeld. St. Germain suffered childhood trauma that would break most people. He sold drugs, fought, and was repeatedly arrested. But he also found people in a group home who treasured him, and helped him reclaim himself. Imagining alternatives to America’s monstrous criminal system requires that we listen to people who have been inside—people like St. Germain.” — James Forman Jr., GQ
“[A] potent new memoir…What distinguishes [Stone of Hope] is the perceptive acuity with which he narrates his personal journey through the ‘system,’ and explains how he was able… to skirt its usual outcomes.” — Vice
“Achingly candid, authentically insightful and compellingly optimistic, A Stone of Hope is destined to help move mountains.” — Shelf Awareness
“[Jim St. Germain] vividly describes the fear and loneliness of life in Brooklyn without his parents…. Like Wes Moore’s The Other Wes Moore, St. Germain’s gritty and self-reflective memoir is an excellent and informative cautionary tale.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“An affecting and earnest testimonial to the power of a humane criminal system built on rehabilitation more than punishment.” — Kirkus
“Jim’s story is visceral and unsparingly honest. Ultimately it is one of transformation and—most important—hope.” — Booklist
“Near the end of A Stone of Hope, a passage describes the value of young people–all young people–to society. As in all the rest of this book, the words sing: with painful trauma experienced and overcome, profound knowledge of the human condition, and deep empathy. Jim St. Germain is particularly artful in shining light on the small moments and minute decisions and seemingly innocuous interactions that can doom a life or bring it to blossom. This is tremendous and courageous storytelling that, one hopes, will touch many lives with positivity in the way Germain’s was touched.” — Jeff Hobbs, author of The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace
“This book is a new perspective on the all-too-familiar story of an inner-city black boy left to go bad. First, we see clearly through the boy’s incisive eye how the grinding machinery of poverty cripples so many young lives. Second, despite the odds, the boy overcomes them and goes good, drawing on his experiences to try to save the next endangered generation. It’s a frightening but ultimately hopeful story.” — Geoffrey Canada, president, Harlem Children’s Zone
“Which, on reflection, feels true. Life is not a training montage from a “Rocky” movie. It is trial and error, setback and achievement. So if you graphed St. Germain’s progress from what he was to what he is, the resulting line might resemble the stock exchange during a bull market — jagged but rising.” — Wall Street Journal