Ralph Grunewald is Assistant Professor in the Department of English and in the Center for Law, Society, and Justice and Mellon-Morgridge Professor of the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
"""'All a criminal conviction requires is a narrative that conveys a plausible, coherent, and acceptable story, ' writes Ralph Grunewald. Alas, that is true. This important book provides our best analysis of how untrue stories can lead to criminal convictions. This is a study that demands our attention.""--Peter Brooks, Sterling Professor of Comparative Literature Emeritus, Yale University ""A must-read for those involved in criminal law and innocence projects, legal comparatists, and Law and Narrative scholars. By comparing US criminal law procedures to their German equivalents, which are based in a less adversarial system, Grunewald shows how, once convicted, it becomes virtually impossible to prove a person's innocence. We cannot afford to not engage with this important work.""--Margareta Olson, author of From Law and Literature to Legality and Affect ""An admirably clear, thorough, and careful analysis of the role of narrative in the criminal trial process. Grunewald has put forth a body of work that significantly advances the field, engaging more seriously with questions of narrative than the vast majority of . . . scholarship in this area.""--Simon Stern, Director, Centre for Innovation Law & Policy, University of Toronto ""An erudite and sophisticated book that displays impressive expertise on both law and narrative theory. . . . Reflects considerable intellectual sophistication on both the literary and legal sides; its analysis of wrongful conviction cases is fascinating and deftly done.""--Robert Weisberg, Edwin E. Huddleson Jr Professor of Law, Stanford Law School ""This brilliant study brims with penetrating insights, challenging accepted ideas about law and the criminal process. Grunewald asks the innocence movement to see that reducing wrongful convictions requires an understanding of how the narrative imagination of police, prosecutors, defense lawyers, judges, and jurors shape perceptions of reality.""--Marvin Zalman, Wayne State University"