"A valuable contribution to scholarship on prisons, abolition, and the methodological importance of lived expertise. Conley effectively demonstrates how the very reality of the virus, along with the forms of community organization that aimed to support those held within the confines of carceral institutions, reveals the limits of the 'total institution' fiction. Instead, COVID revealed the porous nature of prisons, exposing frictions and sites for contestation." - Jessica Evans, assistant professor of criminology at Toronto Metropolitan University"Conley makes a powerful statement of how a crisis serves to expose deep seated systemic problems. A crucial part of the book is the question:Why listen to directly impacted people?" - Susan Sered, co-author of Can't Catch a Break: Gender, Jail, Drugs, and the Limits of Personal Responsibility