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Œuvres de Leah Sottile

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Nationalité
USA
Lieux de résidence
Oregon, USA
Professions
journalist
podcaster

Membres

Critiques

First sentence: I remember when they found the bodies.

Premise/plot: Is this a 'true-crime' book covering the case of Lori Vallow's missing [murdered] children? Yes. In part. It is a broader book than that. It seeks to explore the why. I'll clarify--the why in generalities not specifics. Or not only specifics. Why are there [so many] fringe, extremists, end-times-obsessed groups in the United States? Why do people believe and follow such leaders--often charismatic leaders? How do these groups get started? How do they thrive? How do they go unchecked? In particular, on the fringe-border-spaces of the Mormon (LDS church). Why is doomsday prepping such a big thing? Why the focus on the last days? How much is an inherited "us" vs. "them" mentality? Has the past violence in the church--in the early decades of the nineteenth century--unduly influencing the church still? Why the fascination with near death experiences? Why are so many quick to believe new prophecies and new visions? Is there ever a point where strange becomes too strange? What are the dangers of living in a vacuum. I'll clarify that last one--obviously not literal. If you live in a town, a city, a community, where almost every single person--and almost all authoritative positions--are of a particular religion, say LDS (or Mormon), then what are the dangers and risks? Obviously, there would be plenty of benefits. But there would be risks as well for those that are speaking up about the red flags they see, for those whistle blowers, for those saying HEY something is wrong. The past is the past is the past, but if some of those speaking out had been heard, then maybe just maybe the story would have been different. There were definitely instances of "I knew something was wrong" or "I knew something was off" or "this didn't feel right" or "nothing she was saying made sense to me" etc. Several times outsiders [though perhaps fellow LDS] would say, yes, she's strange but she doesn't pose a threat to anyone else. Yes, she's talking utter nonsense, but it's harmless nonsense. [I can't remember if this was a medical person evaluating her mental health OR a police officer determining if she needed to have her mental health evaluated.]

The book covers OTHER fringe groups over the past hundred, hundred-fifty years. The book covers the legacy of those end-times obsessed, anti-government groups that were all out committed to surviving these last days. The book covers those overlapping spaces between politics and religion that can breed extremists of multiple varieties.

My thoughts: I wasn't expecting a history lesson. I didn't mind a history lesson. But I was expecting a bit narrower focus. I can see why the focus was broadened. In response to the more shallow coverage of the case that separates it out...and turns it into a case of love, lust, passion, obsession. But the case is more complex than that. WAY more complex than that.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
blbooks | 1 autre critique | Apr 4, 2023 |
What "line is there between 'talking with God' and just plain psychotic, schizophrenic raving with the voices in your head?" Amazon Reviewer

Lori Vallow and her new husband, former lover, Chad Daybell, murdered her two children Tylee and JJ. They were also probably responsible for the murders of Lori's ex-husband and Chad's wife. Their trials have not yet occurred.

While this book is a true crime exposition, it is also a deep dive into the fundamentalist cults and the various conspiracy theories they espouse, particularly those sprouting from the LDS sects who are awaiting for the end of the world. I found myself fascinated by this culture and the "visionaries" leading these cults who evoke such irrational beliefs and inspire such loyalty.

3 stars
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
arubabookwoman | 1 autre critique | Dec 11, 2022 |

Listes

Statistiques

Œuvres
1
Membres
54
Popularité
#299,230
Évaluation
4.1
Critiques
2
ISBN
6

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