For thirty-six hours, there was no one left to stop what men wanted to do to each other.
In the early morning of February 2, 1980, a routine inmate count inside the New Mexico State Penitentiary went catastrophically wrong. Two guards were overpowered. Keys were taken. Doors that were never meant to open did. Within minutes, the prison ceased to function-and for the next thirty-six hours, more than a thousand inmates controlled it.
Thirty Six Hours is a gripping work of historical crime fiction based on the deadliest prison riot in American history. Told through multiple perspectives-men trying to survive, men preparing to hunt, and officers watching authority erode-the novel examines how violence doesn't erupt suddenly, but accumulates, fed by overcrowding, fear, administrative blindness, and the slow breakdown of restraint.
As routines fracture and supervision weakens, long-simmering resentments surface. Predators begin to move with purpose. Protective custody becomes a liability instead of a safeguard. Rumors harden into targets. And men who believed neutrality could protect them discover how thin that illusion really is.
Grounded in public records, investigative reports, and contemporary accounts, Thirty Six Hours is not just the story of a riot-it is a descent into the psychology of confinement, the anatomy of fear, and the terrifying speed with which civilization can unravel once control slips away.
When the gates finally open, survival depends not on strength or justice-but on timing, perception, and knowing how to move when the rules disappear.