
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Toronto’s most infamous women’s prison was meant to rehabilitate women … but its real history tells a much darker story. Heather Marshall dives headfirst into the Mercer Reformatory in her latest novel, Liberty Street. The book follows Emily Radcliffe, a 1960s journalist who goes undercover to expose the prison’s harsh conditions and abuse of inmates. Over 30 years later, after the prison’s closing, a detective revisits one of the its sinister mysteries … and these intertwining narratives tell a story of female resilience and strength. This week, Heather tells Mattea Roach about the history of the prison, the real journalists that inspired the story and what it means to be an “incorrigible” woman.
Liked this conversation? Keep listening:
Check us out on Instagram @cbcbooks and TikTok @cbcbooks
By CBC4.7
227227 ratings
Toronto’s most infamous women’s prison was meant to rehabilitate women … but its real history tells a much darker story. Heather Marshall dives headfirst into the Mercer Reformatory in her latest novel, Liberty Street. The book follows Emily Radcliffe, a 1960s journalist who goes undercover to expose the prison’s harsh conditions and abuse of inmates. Over 30 years later, after the prison’s closing, a detective revisits one of the its sinister mysteries … and these intertwining narratives tell a story of female resilience and strength. This week, Heather tells Mattea Roach about the history of the prison, the real journalists that inspired the story and what it means to be an “incorrigible” woman.
Liked this conversation? Keep listening:
Check us out on Instagram @cbcbooks and TikTok @cbcbooks

258 Listeners

414 Listeners

121 Listeners

393 Listeners

166 Listeners

374 Listeners

207 Listeners

77 Listeners

769 Listeners

45 Listeners

27 Listeners

14 Listeners

112 Listeners

175 Listeners

458 Listeners

34 Listeners

92 Listeners

36 Listeners

105 Listeners

280 Listeners