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Brittany K. Barnett

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Brittany K. Barnett

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Born
in Dallas, The United States
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Member Since
March 2020


Brittany K. Barnett is a best-selling author, attorney, and entrepreneur who thrives at the intersection of freedom, hope, and justice. She is dedicated to transforming the criminal justice system and has won freedom for numerous people serving fundamental death sentences for federal drug offenses – including seven clients who received executive clemency from President Barack Obama. Brittany founded the following nonprofits to carry out her life's work: Buried Alive Project, Girls Embracing Mothers, and Manifest Freedom. She has earned many honors, including being named one of America’s most Outstanding Young Lawyers by the American Bar Association. ...more

Average rating: 4.59 · 5,688 ratings · 870 reviews · 1 distinct workSimilar authors
A Knock at Midnight: A Stor...

4.59 avg rating — 5,688 ratings — published 2020 — 9 editions
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The Fury
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by Alex Michaelides (Goodreads Author)
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Black Women Write...
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Wildflower by Aurora  James
Wildflower: A Memoir
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The House of Eve by Sadeqa Johnson
The House of Eve
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A Renaissance of Our Own by Rachel Elizabeth Cargle
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To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
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The Four Agreements by Miguel Ruiz
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“Where does my greatest joy intersect with the world’s greatest need? Let me go there.”
Brittany K. Barnett, A Knock at Midnight: A Story of Hope, Justice, and Freedom

“Gatesville is a small rural town near Waco with a population of fifteen thousand. Over half of that population are incarcerated in the town’s six prisons, all but one of which were built between 1980 and 2005, during which time the prison population in the United States grew an astounding six hundred percent, and in my home state of Texas, twelve hundred percent. Five of the Gatesville prisons are facilities for women.”
Brittany K. Barnett, A Knock at Midnight: A Story of Hope, Justice, and Freedom

“plugged in my headphones. In the sermon, King uses the parable of the neighbor who knocks upon his friend’s door at midnight, seeking three loaves to feed a hungry traveler. The man’s need is great, King reminds us, because the loaves of bread he seeks are spiritual loaves. The bread of faith, the bread of hope, the bread of love. The man’s friend refuses him. “Do not bother me; the door is now shut,” his friend says, “and my children are with me in bed, I cannot get up and give you anything.” In his tremendous tenor, his voice rolling with the calm power and depth of the sea, King explains that the man continues to persistently knock; he will not be denied. He urges us to embrace the hope, faith, and love necessary to continue our struggle for justice in midnight’s darkest hour. With faith in his friend’s generosity, and out of a deep need to provide loaves to his visitor, the man knocks. “Midnight is a confusing hour when it is difficult to be faithful.” His voice sonorous, King intones, “The weary traveler by midnight who asks for bread is really seeking the dawn. Our eternal message of hope is that dawn will come.”
Brittany K. Barnett, A Knock at Midnight: A Story of Hope, Justice, and Freedom

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