I found the first volume in this trilogy (A Prison Diary,, aka Hell) fascinating and compulsively readable. This volume isn't quite as compulsive, but overall I enjoyed it just as much. It's an aspect of life I have no longing for, but, despite the way Archer continually reminds the reader that a good day overall in prison is still not a good day, his ups and downs were very interesting.
In this volume, Archer has left Belmarsh, the Pelican Bay or San Quentin of England, and is at Wayland, a lower-level prison with fewer murderers and other lifers. Here, as in his time at Belmarsh, Archer makes a lot of friends, which are focused more in this volume. Life in prison is always dangerous to some degree, but it's surprising how things work almost automatically -- people frequently warned Archer about really dangerous people, for instance, or if someone seemed threatening out in the yard, they'd start closing in.
Of course, we can't know how people would treat a stranger, and not a very famous and prolific author of popular fiction, but it's obviously not going to be the same. Still, his story is fascinating, and we hear many other really interesting stories.
This book contains 8 pages of color plates, which are very interesting on several levels (the artist, the people depicted, the quality of the art, etc.).
I had read A Prison Diary before, and the only reason I'm re-reading them is that I gave my sister in California all three books, but she was culling her books and asked if I wanted them back. I realized that I can get them at the library quite easily, so that's what I've done. Re-reading the first volume was just as interesting to me, and although I started the present volume (Purgatory) after I read A Prison Diary the first time, I didn't finish it then. For some reason, it wasn't as compelling. But once I got into it this time, I found it very compelling.
Archer managed to get in excellent shape in the gym; that seems to be a frequent byproduct of prison time. He also got to supervise special needs men in the gym, one of the most satisfying things he did in Wayland. For some reason, even though Belmarsh had him teaching creative writing from the first, at Wayland his offers fell on deaf ears.
There's a lot of sports talk, most of which I didn't understand; ditto with English politics. But all the entries are rather brief, so I didn't skip them. Also, parts about sports within the prison were interesting.
As I often do, I kept a list of books Archer read while in prison, along with shows he watched:
Books/plays he reads:
The Glass Bead Game, by Hermann Hesse
Famous Trials, selected by John Mortimer
Diaries, Alan Clark
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, Jean-Dominique Bauby
The Writers' and Artists' Yearbook, to help a prisoner find an agent
The Basement Room, Graham Greene. ("His description of minor characters is breathtaking in its simplicity and the story, although complex, still demands that you turn the page." (102)
The Man Within, Graham Greene
The Prisons Handbook (guide to jails in England and Wales)
Arts and Artists (reads it during pottery class, which he's bad at, but has to do arts.
Oscar Wilde, biography by Sheridan Morley (can hardly put it down)
Caught in the Light, Robert Goddard
Hamlet
King Lear
Richard II
The Tempest
Henry IV, Part I
Twelfth Night
The book he wrote while in prison (other than this trilogy): Sons of Fortune
Television/Movies: EastEnders, Frasier, Ally McBeal, A Touch of Frost (David Jason), Victoria and Albert, with Nigel Hawthorne, Jonathan Pryce, Peter Ustinov, etc. -- loves it, makes him miss live theater; John Le Mesurier in Dad's Army (unforgettable); David Starkey series on the six wives of Henry VIII; special edition of Question Time, chaired by David Dimbleby; Everyone's Nightmare, w/ Patricia Routledge; Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (got hooked on it); Top Gear, docuymentary on Robbie Williams; French Kiss (Meg Ryan and Kevin Kline); Great Expectations (Gwyneth Paltrow and Robert De Niro (terrible, he said); Persuasion (BBC); House of Cards, Michael Dobbs movie;
Newspapers: The Times (daily), Telegraph (daily), News of the World, the Sunday Mirror
Hymns Sung: He would valiant be, Amazing Grace
Library carries Graham Greene, Stephen King, I, Claudius, Harry Potter, Forsyth, Grisham, Follet, and Jilly Cooper are mentioned, as well as "everything in between."