“Haunting…You’ll find yourself lying awake in the small hours, turning it over and over in your mind…Seventy Times Seven is a book about the promise and limits of empathy—the ways in which we see one another, and the ways in which we cannot…Seventy Times Seven gives readers an unflinching glimpse into brutality, pain, loneliness, rage, and revenge, and asks if regret, compassion, mercy, and forgiveness can be enough to bridge the gulfs of race, class, and ideology that so often divide us…Full of questions and painful ambiguities—and Mar is courageous enough to leave most of her questions unanswered.”
—The Washington Post
“Mar’s narrative is probing, careful, elegant, and sure; each page yields a new dimension of the story and requires us to reengage with the facts anew. This is a complicated tale, gracefully told, that will engross readers for years to come.”
—New York Magazine (The Best Books of 2023)
“Riveting…[Mar] chronicles Cooper’s case with sensitivity and addresses challenges of juvenile punishment with insight…A probing and moving book.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“A compassionate account of mercy for a teenage girl on death row…[This book] demonstrate[s] the impact that great true crime can have…giv[ing] a full accounting of not just the details of the crimes but of the lives of those affected by violence, exploring whether the legal system can truly provide justice.”
—The New York Times (Opinion)
“In 1985, four Indiana teenage girls carried out a senseless killing. This gripping tale of the fallout focuses on forgiveness: what it is, who can give it, whether it really changes anything in a culture superficially fixated on amends.”
—The New York Times Book Review‘s “Editors’ Choice”
“…unputdownable. With its blend of solid research, unflinching reportage, and powerful sensitivity, this is a book we’ll be talking about for some time to come.”
—Amazon “Books We’re Talking About” (Editors’ Pick)
“[An] intimate and highly sympathetic account. Anyone moved by Bryan Stevenson’s memoir, Just Mercy, will find Mar’s book a compelling companion piece on the issue of crime and punishment in America. It’s a story that beautifully marries tragedy and hope, illuminating some of the worst and best of which human beings are capable.”
—BookPage
“In the hands of a less capable journalist and writer, the nuances of Paula Cooper’s death penalty trial, the examination of her previous, horrifying home life, and the very question of what constitutes justice might all become too much for one book to bear the weight of, but Alex Mar never falters. Instead, she simply digs deeper, talks to more people, and ultimately gets as close to the truth as she possibly can through dogged research and clear, concise storytelling. The result, Seventy Times Seven: A True Story of Murder and Mercy, stands as not only riveting but also as a meditation on a broken justice system, the idea of forgiveness when the circumstances are so grim, and the nature of justice itself.”
—Shondaland
“The only way this country will ever free itself of the moral stain that is capital punishment is through stories like the one Mar tells in Seventy Times Seven: of individual compassion and moral courage.”
—Jonny Diamond, Literary Hub (“Most Anticipated Books of 2023”)
“Mar’s expansive, humanitarian legal history is also an investigation of belief . . . This is an unsettling look at the recent past and a profoundly affecting read.”
—Booklist (starred review)
“An engrossing study of faith, forgiveness, and justice . . . Deeply reported and vividly written, this is a harrowing and thought-provoking portrait of crime and punishment.”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“A powerful story of violence and its aftereffects, empathy and its limits, forgiveness and its enduring power.”
—Goodreads (“Readers’ Most Anticipated Books of Spring”)
“A probing examination of the intersection of race, crime, and punishment.”
—Kirkus
“A tautly written, wholly empathic work that will stay with you long after you’ve read it.”
—Vol. 1 Brooklyn