<p>This Angela Devlin&rsquo;s classic text was written at a time when there were few if any special arrangements for women in prison in England and Wales. It was a driving force in the creation of a dedicated female prison estate with its own director regimes and regulations that took account of women&rsquo;s different needs. Until then the media tended to focus mainly on high profile women prisoners like Myra Hindley and Rosemary West. Most women became &lsquo;invisible&rsquo; as soon as they passed through the prison gates and were subsumed into a world that was predominantly masculine and insensitive to their own situation.</p><p>The author spent five years visiting prisons taking women interviewing female prisoners and those whose job it is to care for them&thinsp;&mdash;&thinsp;prison officers education probation and healthcare staff chaplains and counsellors. The result is a book that is accessible to the general reader as well as the prison professional. It vividly recreates the realities of prison life for women prisoners.</p><p>Devlin describes the over-use of medication as a means of control; overcrowding; expenditure cuts; staff shortages; the violence resulting from drug misuse; the plight of ethnic minority and foreign national women; and the self-mutilation and suicide attempts of female prisoners in desperate need of help.<br />Invisible Women has stood the test of time. It enables readers&thinsp;&mdash;&thinsp;especially who have never set foot inside a prison&thinsp;&mdash;&thinsp;to see the unique impact of imprisonment on women.</p>