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NYTimes
New York Times
5 Apr 2025
Corey Kilgannon


NextImg:A Killer’s Archive Is Offered for $80,000. Who Should Profit?

The 65th Annual New York International Antiquarian Book Fair at the Park Avenue Armory in Manhattan this weekend may seem like a maze of musty rarities.

But among the first editions and historical manuscripts is an archive of writings from an unlikely place: death row at San Quentin Prison in California.

The archive contains much of the vast output of Albert Jones, a 60-year-old killer who wrote 11 books while confined to 1-EB-117, his cell in the prison’s East Block for a quarter-century. He was one of hundreds of condemned prisoners held on the block until its closing last year.

The writings by Mr. Jones, who was sentenced to death in 1996 for a double murder, are a rare portal into San Quentin’s death row, said Ben Kinmont, the California bookseller who is handling the sale for Mr. Jones and asking $80,000 for the archive.

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Albert Jones compiled recipes from fellow prisoners, who try to perform culinary magic on hot plates. Credit...Angelina Katsanis for The New York Times

“There are no other comparable archives,” Mr. Kinmont said. The collection, which includes private journals, drawings and personal objects, is “the largest and most complete body of material to ever come out of San Quentin’s death row,” he added.


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