Truth hurts … and so does Sorcerer’s Apprentice. Amy Wallace’s harrowing account of her years as Carlos Castaneda’s lover and disciple is a cautionary tale for our times, the story of a woman whose search for meaning took her to the brink, and damned near cost her everything. In this painfully honest memoir, she takes us deep inside the Castaneda cult and shows us the mind games, ego trips, and petty cruelties that wore the guise of wisdom. ‘Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!’ the Wizard once tried to tell Dorothy. Amy Wallace has ripped the curtain down, and laid the wizard bare for all to see.”
—George R.R. Martin, author of A Game of Thrones
"Amy Wallace expertly maps the territory where mysticism merges into insanity, or perhaps the unmarked land between screwball comedy and terrifying tragedy. I can’t recall a stranger, sadder narrative than this."
—Carolyn See, author of Making a Literary Life
"Having grown up reading Carlos Castaneda's books and finding them intriguing and enlightening like many countless others, I was shocked when I stumbled across Amy Wallace's book. I cannot recommend it enough. It certainly will change your perspective on the scenario and raise awareness of the horrors of cults—and of how sometimes hell lurks right around the corner."
—Jeffery Pritchett, Examiner.com
“Sorcerer’s Apprentice is a haunting and brutally honest memoir that reads like a tender love story and, at the same time, a taut psychological thriller. Amy Wallace writes with wisdom, grace, courage, and candor about one of the most charismatic figures of all our times, and she allows us to witness both the splendor and the danger of entrusting one’s fate to a powerful man or woman.”
—Jonathan Kirsch, author of The Harlot by the Side of the Road and The Woman Who Laughed at God
"I simply could not put this book down. Amy Wallace’s relationship with Carlos Castaneda was transformative, exciting, abusive, and painful. This is a cautionary tale, containing essential insights for all of us. Thank you, Amy, for having the courage to tell your story so that others may learn from it, and from the redemptive powers of your own healing."
—Susan Piver, author of The Hard Questions
The book is not artful. But it is a compelling page-turner, full of secrets, betrayals and uncharacterizable wackiness. Castaneda assured Wallace that his magic sperm went straight to a woman's brain, where it effected positive change -- and could not impregnate, as his lovers were merely human. He could read newspapers through his toes. With charisma based on such incredible claims, he kept everyone around him in constant anxiety by alternately offering warm approval and assaulting their inherent worth.
David Doherty
In this intimate memoir, Wallace, the daughter of novelist Irving Wallace and an author/compiler of many books (e.g., The Psychic Healing Book with Bill Henkin), depicts her friendship and love affair with the enigmatic Carlos Castaneda, known for his best-selling books on the teachings of Indian mystic Don Juan. Wallace, who was not only Castaneda's lover but also a member of his cult of followers, reveals that what started out as a positive experience soon turned into a nightmare of humiliations, strange sex games, and weird theatrical rites. Having grown up in a dysfunctional family, Wallace soon became a willing victim of the blandishments of the cult and its fanatic leaders. Enlivened with vivid scenes and personalities, this book shows Wallace's evolution from na ve apprentice to disillusioned ex-member, often in harrowing detail. At the same time, however, the text is seriously hampered by its excessive length and the failure to identify who's who in Castaneda's ever-expanding inner circle. Recommended for popular collections and for those who are fascinated by perverse literary byways and movements.-Morris Hounion, New York City Coll. of Technology Lib., Brooklyn Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.