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Our Father Who Art in Hell [Hardcover]

James Reston (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 1981
This is the definitive work on the Guyana tragedy when on November 18, 1978, one thousand members of the Peoples Temple cult killed themselves in a Guyana jungle by drinking poison-laced Kool-Aid. Through the Freedom of Information Act, the author obtained more than 800 hours of tape recordings made in the jungle. Reston chronicles the descent into madness of the cult leader, the Reverend Jim Jones."Reston's eye is novelistic....His larger purpose is to make the terribly irrational somehow understandable....He does so with the good judgment of a writer willing to avoid certain faddish modes of analysis."-Robert Coles, Washington Post Book Review
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Reston's eye is novelistic....His larger purpose is to make the terribly irrational somehow understandable..." -- Robert Coles, Washington Post Book Review --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

James Reston, Jr. is the author of eleven acclaimed books. The publication of Our Father Who Art in Hell led to a 90 minute NPR radio special called "Father Cares: The Last of Jonestown," which won the Prix Italia in 1982 and to a play, "Jonestown Express," which premiered in Providence, Rhode Island in 1984. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 338 pages
  • Publisher: Times Books; Ex-library edition (March 1981)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0812909631
  • ISBN-13: 978-0812909630
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,237,986 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb! Hell indeed!, May 1, 2005
This review is from: Our Father Who Art in Hell (Hardcover)
I liked this book very much. The way I choose to praise it is to write down the text on its front and back flaps. I think it will help the reader to know if this book is what he/she is looking for:

"Of the Jonestown Massacre, most people can recall the ghoulish photographs, the headlines that screamed of mass suicide in a tropical land. Later, the spectacular flowering of Jim Jones's People's Temple in the Indiana and California years would come to light. But the story no one knows - the jungle story, the descent of this diabolical American genius into madness and bestiality in the South American wilderness, and the lives and thoughts and choices, if any, of the 913 people who followed him there, ultimately to their deaths - has taken James Reston, Jr., two trips to Guyana, years of tireless research, and a legal suit against the U.S. government to uncover. With hundreds of original tapes, and revelatory first-hand interviews with survivors and relatives of the Jonestown dead, Our Father Who Art in Hell penetrates through to and lays vare the whole story.
"Out of 'his vaulted sense of his own historical destiny', Jones taped the nightly Temple sessions in Guyana, tapes for which author Reston tenaciously fought the F.B.I. and the F.C.C. and to which he finally won exclusive access. Here, these never-before-seen texts are the riveting, terrifying testaments to the deterioration of a brilliant but increasingly ill and paranoid Jim Jones. A rich, unforgettable, and authentic portrait emerges of the charismatic preacher whose success was deeply rooted in the failure of the 1970s to fulfill the golden promise of the 60s; a man who brought his mammoth flock (he built the largest single Protestant movement in California's history) from the reality of the world into the jungle, and there descended into cruelty, madness, and finally murder. Startling new conclusions come forth from this material... including Jones's premeditation of his apocalypse three years before the event... and some provocative information about Mark Lane's role in Jonestown.
"Of Jones's surviving followers, Reston says: 'They are far from robots they are portrayed to be. In their grief they are angry, some at Jones, most at the U.S. government. Jones touched their core of belief in an age of cynicism, and thereby made them vulnerable...'
"As seductively beautiful and haunting as Joseph Conrad novel, James Reston's watershed 'novel in reality' makes understandable one of the most horrifying and bizarre events in American history. It should not be missed."
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE book on Jonestown, Jim Jones and People's Temple, April 9, 2008
By 
Richard J. Weaver "The Answer Man" (New Orleans, LA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
James Reston's "Our Father Who Art In Hell" is a well-written book that I consider THE book on Jim Jones, Jonestown and People's Temple. He has a very descriptive writing style that sets the various scenes not only physically, but emotionally.

What I really enjoyed about the book is how he layers the goings on throughout. By now, we all know the story of Jones' "Church" moving from Indiana to Ukiah to San Francisco and eventually to Guyana. Each step along the way, he flashes forward and backward to emphasize different points he tries to make throughout the book. The book does follow a somewhat chronological order, and it really hooked me from page one.

The only issue that I have with the book is through no fault of Reston's. Since the book initial publication, new information has been exposed through the Freedom of Information Act to disprove some of the facts Reston uses in the book, but when he wrote it, those were the facts that were provided. For example, he tells of how the keyboard player lightly plays a "death derge" during the final hours of Jonestown. Well, years later, audio experts declared the music heard on the top was simply music previously recorded on the tape at a higher speed. The tapes used in Jonestown were often re-used and there was some bleed-over effect. And since the music was recorded at a much higher speed than the "death tape" it sounds very slow and drawn out.

All in all, this is an outstanding book. I highly recommend this to anyone who is interested in learning or learning more about the events that took place in the jungles of Guyuna on that fateful day of Nov. 18, 1978.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An excellent, researched book on the Jonestown Massacre!, October 21, 2008
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This review is from: Our Father Who Art in Hell (Hardcover)
Next month will mark the sad, tragic anniversary of the Jonestown Massacre. I refuse to call it a suicide since Jones orchestrated this horrible and awful event in which hundreds (over 900) were forced to drink poison to their deaths whether by force or brainwashed to do so. It wasn't just the vulnerable members but the authors explains the situation like the custody battle between ex-member Grace Stroen and Jones. She had a son with Jim Jones who carries her husband's name even though Jones was married to Marceline. Grace wanted her son back but Jones didn't want to have to answer to the authorities. The loss of one was like the loss of his entire flock. Rather than returning the child to his mother, he would hold hostage and convince his members that the world was seeking to destroy him and his people who had come to live in peace. Then there is the case of Jann Sturvich, a college student from a wealthy family, who ended up being among the hundreds of rotting corpses in Jonestown. She wanted to make the world a better place and ended up a victim of Jones' insecurities, madness, and manipulation.
The book is hard to fathom because there is so much going on with Jim Jones who was pretty much dying himself. He was an absolute control freak who wanted control over his influence and among the press and politicians. Behind the dark glasses, the eyes were that of a human monster who would rather kill his own people who he claimed to love rather than set them free. You wonder about the what ifs too.
The book does not have any pictures or maps but detailed descriptions from the author about the tragic events which unfolded on that hot November day almost thirty years ago. I think the world has dismissed the members as willing participants in their final act entitled revolutionary suicide. Nothing could have been further from the truth. They were all brought there under false pretenses, stripped of their identification, money, and the environment was harsh, brutal, hot, and unbearable. Jones would work his members and then they had to listen to his voice over the microphone all night long. There was no room to be free of thought when you were worked to death, malnourished, and paranoid of the other members who can betray the entire organization. The man who claimed to be their father, bishop, leader, had turned into their killer at the same time. He had robbed them more of their possessions but of their right to free will and thought without corrupting their minds. They didn't need the kool-aid poisoned drinks to be poisoned since he had poisoned their minds all along with lies, mis-truths, deceit, etc. Congressman Leo Ryan and the families of concerned members and the press came to rescue their people but it was in a sense too late. Those who were lucky enough to flee tried and some successfully. But hundreds of others had put their faith, trust, and love in a man who never returned his affections without scorn and scrutiny. The author here also writes that Jones was a Christian atheist which is one shocking truth and that he was a racist which I now realize was also the case. How did it get so far and how we could have stopped it from happening is still the case? There are cults out there that may not be as well known or numerous as Jones but evil is still out there.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
parallax view, chief consul, revolutionary suicide, greatest decision
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Jim Jones, People's Temple, San Francisco, United States, Port Kaituma, Sharon Amos, John Victor Stoen, Soviet Union, Timothy Stoen, State Department, Grace Stoen, Concerned Relatives, Charles Garry, Father Morrison, American Embassy, New York, Prime Minister, Larry Layton, New Orleans, New West, Jann Gurvich, Congressman Ryan, Tim Stoen, The Power of the Profane Word, North West
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