25 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting, but confusing, September 18, 2009
This review is from: Cult Insanity: A Memoir of Polygamy, Prophets, and Blood Atonement (Hardcover)
Here is the true story of Ervil LeBaron, the "Mormon Manson" as told from the point of view of his sister-in-law, Irene Spencer.
This is Mrs. Spencer's second book about being a plural wife in the LeBaron cult. I've read her first book, Shattered Dreams, as well. That first one was about her marriage to Verlan LeBaron, her jealousy of being one of ten wives, the depressing poverty they lived in as one man vainly tried to support ten wives and 58 children.
In Cult Insanity she discusses the history of the LeBaron cult, how several of the LeBaron brothers believed themselves to be God's prophet on Earth, and how brother Ervil's thirst for power led to murder, violence, and constant fear within the group. Ervil has his followers murder his brother Joel, repeatedly attempt to murder his brother Verlan, murder his own daughter, and kill about 25 people from his death list. The murders went on even after he died in prison as his followers continued to eliminate people from his death list, and then began to turn on one another. It's an amazing story of what can happen when a mentally ill person is able to recruit believers to carry out his evil plans.
Now I have read several books about the LeBarons--these two by Irene Spencer, another by her sister wife Susan, and one by Ervil's wife Rena, who killed for him. Despite all that, sometimes this new book was hard to follow. It was hard to keep track of who all the people were and how they were relatd to one another. With all the plural marriages, you'd have somebody married to one woman whose sister was married to that person's father who was also married to the first person's daughter. Very confusing. Some more charts would have been helpful, as well as more explanations. I had the feeling Irene assumed you had read her first book and remembered a lot of people from that book, which I did, but not as well as she assumed. There was one chart that showed Ervil's wives and their many children. It helpfully indicateded which ones were murdered, which ones were in jail, and which ones had killed themselves. A shocking number had died at their own hands.
My recommendation is that you read this, because it is fascinating. However, you'll get more out of it if you read another book about the LeBarons first. I read Ben Bradlee's book Prophet of Blood after I read this book. I think it would have been better to read them in the opposite order.
I hear that Irene Spencer intends to write more books about her experience with the LeBarons. If she does, I will be certainly near the first in line to read them. It's a fascinating story, but I'm glad I didn't live it.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Severely disturbed family, January 20, 2010
This review is from: Cult Insanity: A Memoir of Polygamy, Prophets, and Blood Atonement (Hardcover)
Cult Insanity is the true-life memoir of the author, a woman who for years was married to one of the LeBaron brothers. To say that this family was simply "crazy" is putting it lightly: several generations of family members hearing voices, being locked up in insane asylums, running around nude in preparation of UFOs landing, and, oh yeah, all the murders places this family in the realms of the seriously mentally disturbed.
I didn't read the first book the author wrote (Shattered Dreams), which tells her life being married in polygamy. I wish I would've read that book first, because at times I was a bit lost with all the wives and the extended family. Cult Insanity focuses more on how the cult started, and on the murders; so there isn't much background on the family itself, except for a few of the LeBaron brothers.
The first two-thirds of the book moves a bit slow; with not much happening except the cult growing stronger and getting wierder. It's not until the last third of the book that it gets truly chilling and disturbing. Also, most of the murders are just a short footnote at the end; don't expect to find a detailed account of all that happened. I wish too the author would've written more what her own emotions were during this time. Often, she comes across as very detached, which certainly makes sense after some of the things she's been through
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Growing up in a cult, April 22, 2010
This review is from: Cult Insanity: A Memoir of Polygamy, Prophets, and Blood Atonement (Hardcover)
This book paints a picture of what it is like to spend a lifetime following after an idea that is warped and the slow awakening to the notion that one's entire foundation may be crumbling. A bit slow in the middle...not unlike life. =)
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