sharena robinson, daughter of larry walker: i felt like we hit the lottery. jeffreyena robinson: oh, my gosh. it was, i mean, i'm 44, and at the time i was only 2.5 when my father was falsely convicted of a crime he didn't commit. so, of course, as time goes on, the case gets older, so evidence can possibly get lost, or misplaced, whatever the case may be. and it was like, it was no hope. so, they gave us hope. they gave us hope. they gave us my father. they brought him home, because it was, without them, we wouldn't have been here. jeffrey: so, larry, 38 years of your life. are you bitter? larry: i'm bitter because of what was taken from my family, from my son and daughter, and my mother, and my father. i'm not bitter. i'm just not bitter because i have faith that things happen for a reason. i'm just really more thankful than to be bitter. jeffrey: grisham says every wrongful conviction case deserves a book of its own. john grisham: the elements are there for great storytelling. there's great drama, injustice, corruption, loss, perseverance, maybe redemption, maybe