<p>The idea of men in jail had interested Jim Tully for years going back to his youthful reading of Dostoyevsky's <em>The House of the Dead</em> and his own time in jail and on a work crew. It was to this subject that he turned with <em>Shadows of Men</em>. He had already written about drifters and the underworld in <em>Beggars of Life</em> and <em>Circus Parade</em> but those episodes were respectively part of his larger story of life as a road kid and working for a small-time circus. <em>Shadows of Men</em> would be different. Its first eighteen chapters focused exclusively on the brutal aspects of his road years. These chapters are set in hobo camps boxcars railroad yards&nbsp;jails and cotton fields. As Tully wrote in the foreword to a later book <em>Blood on the Moon</em> <em>Shadows of Men</em> contains the tribulations vagaries and hallucinations of men in jail. <em>Shadows of Men</em> unsparing in its depiction of bleak people and places at cruel edges of the American landscape was the book that cemented that reputation.</p><p><br></p>
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