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Waiting to Be Heard: A Memoir Hardcover – Deckle Edge, April 30 2013
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Amanda Knox spent four years in a foreign prison for a crime she did not commit, as seen in the Netflix documentary Amanda Knox.
In the fall of 2007, the 20-year-old college coed left Seattle to study abroad in Italy, but her life was shattered when her roommate was murdered in their apartment.
After a controversial trial, Amanda was convicted and imprisoned. But in 2011, an appeals court overturned the decision and vacated the murder charge. Free at last, she returned home to the U.S., where she has remained silent, until now.
Filled with details first recorded in the journals Knox kept while in Italy, Waiting to Be Heard is a remarkable story of innocence, resilience, and courage, and of one young woman’s hard-fought battle to overcome injustice and win the freedom she deserved.
With intelligence, grace, and candor, Amanda Knox tells the full story of her harrowing ordeal in Italy—a labyrinthine nightmare of crime and punishment, innocence and vindication—and of the unwavering support of family and friends who tirelessly worked to help her win her freedom.
Waiting to Be Heard includes 24 pages of color photographs.
- Print length480 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarper
- Publication dateApril 30 2013
- Dimensions15.24 x 3.84 x 22.86 cm
- ISBN-109780062217202
- ISBN-13978-0062217202
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Review
“Meditative.... Evocative.... [Knox has] an ability to convey her emotions with considerable visceral power.” — Michiko Kakutani, New York Times
“[T]he section on her prison years rivets. It’s painful to see the smart, beautiful, incredibly naive exchange student of the first few pages turn hard and brittle as she navigates the labyrinthine Italian prison system.” — Entertainment Weekly
“A raw and dramatic account of her lost years.” — People
From the Back Cover
In November 2007, Amanda Knox was twenty years old and had been studying abroad in Perugia, Italy, for only a few weeks when her friend and roommate, a young English student named Meredith Kercher, was brutally murdered. The investigation made headlines around the world, and Amanda's arrest placed her at the center of a media firestorm. Young, naïve, grieving at the horrifying death of her friend, and with little more than basic knowledge of the Italian language, she was subjected to harsh interrogations during which she struggled to understand the police and to make her own words understood. The subsequent trial exposed Amanda to international scrutiny and speculation, and she became a tabloid staple. In 2009, after an extremely controversial trial, she was wrongly convicted of murder. But in October 2011, after Amanda had spent four years in an Italian prison, and following a lengthy appeals process, the conviction was overturned. Amanda immediately flew home to the United States.
Now, in Waiting to Be Heard, Amanda Knox shares for the very first time the truth about her terrifying ordeal. Drawing from journals she kept and letters she wrote during her incarceration, Amanda gives an unflinching and deeply personal account of her harrowing experience, from the devastation of her friend's murder to the series of mistakes and misunderstandings that led to her arrest. She speaks intimately about what it was like, at the age of twenty, to find herself imprisoned in a foreign country for a crime she did not commit and demonized by the international media, and about the impact on her family and loved ones as they traveled back and forth to be at her side so that she would not be alone. She describes the relationships that bloomed with those who believed in her innocence and how the strength of her family helped her survive the most challenging time of her young life. With grace and gratitude, Amanda describes the aftermath of the trial and her return home to the States, where she is able once again to look forward to the future.
A young woman's soul-baring account of a nightmare turned real, of unimaginable horror and the miscarriage of justice that ensued, and, ultimately, of fortitude in the face of overwhelming adversity, Waiting to Be Heard is a memoir unlike any you have ever read.
About the Author
Amanda Knox is an exoneree and a writer in Seattle, Washington. She was wrongfully convicted of murder in Perugia, Italy, in 2009. In 2011 the conviction was overturned, and she was affirmatively found innocent of the charge of murder. In March 2013, the Italian Court of Cassation annulled the acquittal and ordered a new review of the case. Then in March 2015 Italy’s high court overturned the previous convictions and ruled she was innocent. She now lives in Seattle, her hometown. She is committed to helping others who have been wrongfully convicted.
Product details
- ASIN : 0062217208
- Publisher : Harper; First Edition (April 30 2013)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 480 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780062217202
- ISBN-13 : 978-0062217202
- Item weight : 740 g
- Dimensions : 15.24 x 3.84 x 22.86 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: #160,814 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #237 in Social Activist Biographies & Memoirs
- #671 in Political Biographies (Books)
- #948 in Military Biographies (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Amanda Knox is an exoneree, journalist, public speaker, and author of the New York Times best-selling memoir, Waiting to Be Heard (HarperCollins, April 2013). Between 2007 and 2015, she spent nearly four years in an Italian prison and eight years on trial for a murder she didn’t commit. Amanda hosted and produced The Scarlet Letter Reports, a VICE/Facebook series about the public vilification of women, and The Truth About True Crime, a podcast and Facebook Watch series for Sundance/AMC. She currently writes and producers the podcast LABYRINTHS with her husband, Christopher Robinson.
Customer reviews
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Top reviews from Canada
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Good for you Amanda for telling your story. When the press made you out to be this monster, this liar it's amazing how you stayed in one piece. You just lost your best friend, then blammed for a murder. You were interrogated, while not sleeping or eating. Why weren't you given a lawyer? Why did they have to hit you? i was so angry at the Italian Police, after reading this. How can they be so irresponsible, how can they treat a 20 year old so badly? Their lack of skill, and maybe lack of training in Italy is different then what we are used to in North America. This book is worth the money. I hope you take the time to buy it. I'm happy you wrote this book Amanada. I hope you can have a wonderful life and put this awful nightmare behind you!!
The question remains: why was the prosecutor so zealous in this highly publicized case when the real culprit was tried and found guilty?
Was it because Amanda is an attractive and very photogenic young woman that the media exploited for its own selfish reasons?
Because the real guilty party negotiated a reduced sentence by implicating Amanda?
The whole matter boggles the mind.
I can only praise the author as a survivor of this blatant injustice.
Top reviews from other countries
Non mi piace definirmi un fan di Amanda Knox se mai un simpatizzante. Questo libro mi ha aiuto a capire meglio ciò che è successo a Perugia e tutta la storia dietro l’omicidio di Meredith. Consiglio vivamente questo libro.
Something that needs to be grasped (and isn't, on the whole) is that Amanda Knox almost certainly wasn't comfortable with having this book published, but she really had no choice, not because of a need to be, well, heard, but to get her family at least some way out the massive financial hole they were in (to the tune of $millions, by all accounts) after years of legal costs and travelling to and from Italy.
Given this, I almost felt like a voyeur reading it.
Doubtlessly like many people, I had come to assume that I knew something about Amanda Knox and her personality, after having followed she and Raffaele's ordeal since their conviction in late 2009. This was a rather superficial of me - I had allowed lots of speculation by media pundits and bloggers, the random pictures taken during and after her release, and a few media interviews (IOW, her speaking with people who were as good as strangers to her) to sort of 'osmose' into my mind.
Waiting To be Heard has disabused me of this.
First off, she is a much better, more mature writer than I had expected. The four or five sessions in the 24 hours it took me to finish it involved very little skimming (where it did, it was only where sources/material I was familiar with were being quoted), because the prose is lucid and simply flows very well.
At the end of it, it was clear that my assumption that I "knew" Amanda is the same as that made by countless others after having been exposed to the intense media scrutiny of a person who has had unwanted fame and notoriety forced on them. Hence the almost bizarre divergence of "opinions" (or rather, I would say **feelings**) about who and what she is.
I don't know Amanda, I've never met her and I doubt I ever will, but having read this book, I certainly have a much better idea of what I might expect if I did. And I think I would be rather impressed.



