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Overview
In 1954, a past or named Jim Jones opened a church in Indianapolis called Peoples Temple Full Gospel Church. He was a charismatic preacher with idealistic beliefs, and he quickly filled his pews with an audience eager to hear his sermons on social justice. As Jones’s behavior became erratic and his message more ominous, his followers leaned on each other to recapture the sense of equality that had drawn them to his church. But even as the congregation thrived, Jones made it increasingly difficult for members to leave. By the time Jones moved his congregation to a remote jungle in Guyana and the U.S. government began to investigate allegations of abuse and false imprisonment in Jonestown, it was too late.
A Thousand Lives is the story of Jonestown as it has never been told. New York Times bestselling author Julia Scheeres drew from tens of thousands of recently declassified FBI documents and audiotapes, as well as rare videos and interviews, to piece together an unprecedented and compelling history of the doomed camp, focusing on the people who lived there.
The people who built Jonestown wanted to forge a better life for themselves and their children. In South America, however, they found themselves trapped in Jonestown and cut off from the outside world as their leader goaded them toward committing “revolutionary suicide” and deprived them of food, sleep, and hope. Vividly written and impossible to forget, A Thousand Lives is a story of blind loyalty and daring escapes, of corrupted ideals and senseless, haunting loss.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781416596400 |
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Publisher: | Free Press |
Publication date: | 11/13/2012 |
Pages: | 336 |
Sales rank: | 529,952 |
Product dimensions: | 5.50(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.90(d) |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
A Thousand Lives
Had I walked by 1859 Geary Boulevard in San Francisco when Peoples Temple was in full swing, I certainly would have been drawn to the doorway.
I grew up in a conservative Christian family with an adopted black brother; race and religion were the dominant themes of my childhood. In our small Indiana town, David and I often felt self-conscious walking down the street together. Strangers scowled at us, and sometimes called us names. I wrote about the challenges of our relationship in my memoir, Jesus Land.
Suffice it to say, David and I would have been thrilled and amazed by Peoples Temple, a church where blacks and whites worshipped side by side, the preacher taught social justice instead of damnation, and the gospel choir transported the congregation to a loftier realm. We longed for such a place.
Unfortunately, the laudable aspects of Peoples Temple have been forgotten in the horrifying wake of Jonestown.
I stumbled onto writing this book by accident. I was writing a satirical novel about a charismatic preacher who takes over a fictional Indiana town, when I remembered Jim Jones was from Indiana, and Googled him. I learned that the FBI had released fifty thousand pages of documents, including diaries, meeting notes, and crop reports, as well as one thousand audiotapes that agents found in Jonestown after the massacre, and that no one had used this material to write a comprehensive history of the doomed community. Once I started digging through the files, I couldn’t tear myself away.
It was easy to set my novel aside. I believe that true stories are more powerful, in a meaningful, existential way, than made-up ones. Learning about other people’s lives somehow puts one’s own life in sharper relief.
Aside from race and religion, there were other elements of the Peoples Temple story that resonated with me. When David and I were teenagers, our parents sent us to a Christian reform school in the Dominican Republic that had some uncanny parallels with Jonestown. I could empathize with the residents’ sense of isolation and desperation.
You won’t find the word cult in this book, unless I’m directly citing a source that uses the word. My aim here is to help readers understand the reasons that people were drawn to Jim Jones and his church, and how so many of them ended up dying in a mass-murder suicide on November 18, 1978. The word cult only discourages intellectual curiosity and empathy. As one survivor told me, nobody joins a cult.
To date, the Jonestown canon has veered between sensational media accounts and narrow academic studies. In this book, I endeavor to tell the Jonestown story on a grander, more human, scale.
Julia Scheeres
Berkeley, California, March 24, 2011
Table of Contents
Introduction xi
Chapter 1 An Adventure 1
Chapter 2 Church 5
Chapter 3 Redwood Valley 14
Chapter 4 "Dad" 23
Chapter 5 Edith 29
Chapter 6 Traitors 39
Chapter 7 Exodus 48
Chapter 8 Pioneers 59
Chapter 9 The Promised Land 71
Chapter 10 Georgetown 81
Chapter 11 Siege 87
Chapter 12 Bullets to Kill Bumblebees 100
Chapter 13 Runaways 106
Chapter 14 Concern 114
Chapter 15 Control 125
Chapter 16 Release 136
Chapter 17 Drill 143
Chapter 18 Hyacinth 153
Chapter 19 Stanley 157
Chapter 20 Relatives 162
Chapter 21 The Embassy 168
Chapter 22 The Widening Gyre 174
Chapter 23 Escape 184
Chapter 24 Chaos 189
Chapter 25 November 200
Chapter 26 Ryan 206
Chapter 27 End 223
Chapter 28 Bodies 235
Chapter 29 Survivors 240
Notes 251
Acknowledgments 293
Index 295
Reading Group Guide 309