His memoir, Writing my Wrongs, was published in March 2016. While serving his sentence for second-degree murder, he discovered redemption and responsibility through literature -- starting with The Autobiography of Malcolm X -- and through his own writing. "It was like I can't—whatever I do, if I never get out of prison, I refuse for that to be the legacy for my child. Instead, it was the beginning of a years-long journey to redemption, one with humbling and sobering lessons for us all. He was a drug dealer in Detroit, and one night, he shot and killed a man who showed up on his doorstep. The letter dramatically shifted his perspective, leading to an awakening within him to rethink his life. Shaka Senghor’s story is told with brutal self-assessment and tender attention to what makes profound change – in a person, in our communities – not only possible but imperative. Shaka says he experienced a life-changing epiphany after reading the letter. "That was the moment when I decided that I would never go back to the darkness," Shaka says, "and that I … Shaka Senghor is director's fellow of the MIT Media Lab, college lecturer, author, and was convicted of murder in American courts.As of October 2015, he also teaches a class as part of the Atonement Project, a partnership between him, the University of Michigan, and the MIT Media Lab. Jailed for second degree murder, that could very well have been the end of the story. Shaka Senghor also killed a man. In 1991, Shaka Senghor shot and killed a man. At the age of 19, Shaka Senghor went to prison fuming with anger and despair. Lisa Capretto OWN In the past, Shaka Senghor was proud to be a hardened man. His son's words shattered his understanding of himself. He was, he says, "a drug dealer with a quick temper and a semi-automatic pistol." In 1991, he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, and spent the next 19 years behind bars, seven of them in solitary confinement. Shaka Senghor was in solitary confinement when a note from his son led to a life-changing epiphany. But it wasn't. Shaka shares with Oprah the life-changing epiphany he experienced reading his son's words. In this unforgettable memoir Shaka takes us from the streets of Detroit into solitary confinement in prison, and against all odds, home safely and successfully to a family and community that needs him.``