Six publishers have volunteered for a night in the cells, fundraising for campaign against limits on prisoners' entitlement to books
There's more than one sort of porridge, as any lag would tell you. Profile Books publisher Andrew Franklin opted for the lumpier kind when he volunteered to spend a night in the cells this week with a Jeffrey Archer novel. He is one of six luminaries of the publishing world who were banged up on Thursday night to raise money for the Howard League for Penal Reform's campaign against the recent ban on gifts of books to prisoners.
Pledges totalling £4,749.88 secured Franklin his overnight detention, alongside fellow publishers Jamie Byng (Canongate) and David Young (Hachette), agent Clare Conville, Society of Authors chair Anna Sebba and Polly Powell, CEO of Pavilion Books, which is hosting the overnight stay in disused police cells conveniently located beneath their London offices, in the old West London Magistrates' Court.
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Pledges totalling £4,749.88 secured Franklin his overnight detention, alongside fellow publishers Jamie Byng (Canongate) and David Young (Hachette), agent Clare Conville, Society of Authors chair Anna Sebba and Polly Powell, CEO of Pavilion Books, which is hosting the overnight stay in disused police cells conveniently located beneath their London offices, in the old West London Magistrates' Court.
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