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Let's sell these people A Piece of Blue Sky: Hubbard, Dianetics and Scientology Paperback – February 5, 2013

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 234 ratings

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Let’s sell these people a Piece of Blue Sky: the new, unexpurgated, unabridged version of the classic history of L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology. Exposing Hubbard’s false claims to be a war hero, a nuclear physicist, an explorer and a protégé of Eastern gurus, and showing the true malevolence of Scientology.“Invaluable for its history and insight into the character of its founder, L. Ron Hubbard.” Lawrence Wright, Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, & the Prison of Belief “If you only have time to read one book about L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology, this landmark work is the one.” Miles C. Ferguson“This is the best book I have read about Scientology.” Steve Cannane, ABC Lateline, Australia“A Piece of Blue Sky is the standard reference among serious students of authoritarian belief systems. Newer books about Scientology have been released, but none reproduce the detail and narrative clarity of Atack’s book.” Christian Szurko, DialogCentre UK“Since 1976, I have met, interviewed and counseled countless former officials and ex-members of Scientology. Of everyone I have ever met, and every book I have ever read, Jon Atack is the definitive resource of all things ‘Hubbard.’” Steven Hassan, author Freedom of Mind “When I first read Jon Atack's amazing book A Piece of Blue Sky it was a series of revelations. I had been on the receiving end of the false promises, heavy ethics pressures and greed-motivated financial stresses for decades without being able to reconcile these things with Hubbard's writings. Jon's book gave me considerable relief as to what was really going on behind the facade” Michael Pattinson, ex-OT 8.“As someone who has been at the top of organized scientology, and seen much of what really went on there, I would like to express my appreciation for what Jon Atack has done to get out the truth when it was not safe to do it.” Denise Brennan, former Watchdog Committee Member“Throughout my professional life, I have seen so many victims of poisonous ideologies from communism and scientology to Saddam Hussein’s “return to faith” and Al Qaeda’s “martyrdom”. In my attempts to help those sufferers, I applied a lesson learned from Jon Atack’s writings that freedom cannot be delivered, granted, or enforced. The true and complete freedom comes only with the freedom of mind and Jon Atack’s book is the best guide for all who want to achieve that freedom.” Professor Khapta Akhmedova, expert on terrorism“Honestly written, amazingly accurate, and beautifully assembled, which is why it stood the test.” Gerry Armstrong, former Hubbard aide“This book is fascinating.... and fresh. I've read every expose and this one is on the top of my list.” Paulette Cooper, author The Scandal of Scientology“A Piece of Blue Sky was my first introduction to the real truth about L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology. It's still the most reliable of the many books on the subject. No one seems to have worked harder to get things right by relying so carefully on rare and crucial documents that spell out the history of Scientology's abuses.” Tony Ortega, former editor, Village Voice “All future scholarship on Scientology will build upon his contribution.” Professor Stephen Kent“When I first read A Piece of Blue Sky, it became more than instrumental in helping me to understand my experiences and put them into a meaningful context that changed my life.” Bonnie Woods, ex-OT3“Atack’s book displays mastery of his material and subtlety of analysis and discussion that would be praised at the typical final doctoral examination.” Richard de Mille, ghost author of Hubbard’s Science of Survival“This book delivers like none other. We used it extensively during the fifteen years we helped families retrieve their loved ones from the cult of Scientology, and we still recommend it today to those who want to know the truth about Scientology.” Jerry Whitfield and Hana Eltringham Whitfield

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Jon Atack was a 'public' Scientologist for nine years. He trained as a counsellor and did the secret 'OT' levels, but left when he discovered the criminality which put eleven members, including the founder's wife, in prison. He spent years interviewing former members, digging out records and unmasking the many false claims of its founder, Ron Hubbard, before publishing A Piece of Blue Sky. Jon is the author of many papers on the subject of Scientology, and has been acknowledged as the leading authority on this subject by academics the world over. Jon has counselled hundreds of former members and survived extensive harassment from Scientology. He has four children, and one grandchild and lives in the heart of England, where, as Voltaire advised, he cultivates his garden.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform; 2nd edition (February 5, 2013)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 478 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1482023032
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1482023039
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.4 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1.08 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 234 ratings

About the author

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Jon Atack
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Jon Atack was born in the cathedral city of Lichfield, in the heart of England, in 1955. He left school at 17 to play drums in various rock bands. When he was 19, he joined the Scientology cult. Although he was never a live-in member, he took many courses and 25 of the available levels of the ‘Bridge’ – to Operating Thetan Section V. Jon left the cult in 1983, appalled by its aggressive behaviour towards members. He refused to ‘disconnect’ (or shun) a close friend and was shocked to find that eleven senior members of the cult – including the leader’s wife – had been sentenced to prison terms for kidnapping, breaking and entering, theft, burglary and false imprisonment, based on their own confessions.

Jon put aside his career as an artist (www.jonatack.com) to help those harmed by the cult’s hypnotic practices. In 12 years, he saw over 500 former members and helped many to recover the money that had been extracted from them by Scientology’s hard selling techniques. He was active on over 150 court cases and was consulted by many government organizations. Jon also gave several conference papers and his work was supported by more than 40 academics, including Professor Stephen Kent, head of sociology and history of religion at Alberta University, who said that Jon’s work was beyond the standard for a doctoral thesis.

Jon was subjected to constant harassment by Scientologists. His house was picketed by placard carrying cult members. Spurious reports were made to various authorities. Rumours were spread. He was falsely accused of child abuse, attempted murder, rape and heroin addiction. Jon was followed by private investigators, one of whom tricked him out of the manuscript to his book, A Piece of Blue Sky, so that the cult could sue prior to publication.

Jon’s book A Piece of Blue Sky, was published in 1990, after a court battle in New York. It became an Amazon top 100 best seller. However, because of a precedent over the letters of JD Salinger, 60 passages in the book had been paraphrased. This included some of the most important material from Jon’s vast collection. In 2013, the book was reissued with all 60 passages back in place. The new edition is called Let’s sell these people A Piece of Blue Sky, to distinguish it from the earlier edition, which remains in print, without the author’s consent.

Jon is the author of many papers about Scientology, most of which are available on the internet. He has blogged at Tony Ortega’s Underground Bunker since the Spring of 2013 – http://tonyortega.org/category/scientology-mythbusting/. His concern is for the recovery of former members, from the hypnotic enslavement of Scientology.

Jon continues to paint and play drums. He has written several novels, including Voodoo Child (slight return) and the upcoming Halcyon Daze. He has also made a character by character translation of Lao Tze’s Tao Te Ching, which will be published in 2015. He lives in a charming village near Nottingham, where, as Voltaire advised, he cultivates his garden. Jon had four children and one grandchild.


Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
234 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book informative, meticulously researched, and well-documented. They also describe the writing quality as well-written and easy to read. Readers mention the narrative is solid, filled with documented true tales of intrigue, and provides the thrill of a fiction novel.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

23 customers mention "Information quality"23 positive0 negative

Customers find the book informative, meticulously researched, and well-documented. They say it gives a good insight into the real character of Ron Hubbard. Readers also mention the author did an amazing job providing the facts that Scientology hides. Overall, they describe the book as fascinating, amusing, and shocking.

"...He tells you his complete story, gives you all facts, and makes the writing objective enough for the reader to form their own opinion on the matter..." Read more

"...This begged the question: If the religion was so wonderful, so liberating, so superior spiritually, why would it persecute its members who wished to..." Read more

"...It is eye-opening and cathartic to know what was really going on.The author literally went through hell to tell this story...." Read more

"...Overall Atack is very thorough and well documented in his analysis of the topic; absolutely worth reading for anyone interested in how Scientology..." Read more

8 customers mention "Writing quality"8 positive0 negative

Customers find the writing quality of the book well-written and easy to read. They also appreciate the connections and points supporting the book.

"...He tells you his complete story, gives you all facts, and makes the writing objective enough for the reader to form their own opinion on the matter..." Read more

"...In fact, after having read a few other, also very well written accounts, I still think this is the best of the lot." Read more

"A very well-written, researched-based account of Scientology from its beginnings. I highly recommend it...." Read more

"...Extremely well written and structured to hold the readers interest through the various high and low points of the life of a fascinating..." Read more

4 customers mention "Narrative quality"4 positive0 negative

Customers find the narrative quality of the book solid. They say it's filled with documented true tales of intrigue and jaw-dropping escapades. Readers also describe the book as a definitive and classic.

"...This book provided the thrill of a fiction novel but with all the facts and first hand experience detail of a true story. “..." Read more

"...but then, somewhat miraculously, at about the 75% mark, a solid "narrative" appears; it's almost as if someone else is writing this part of the..." Read more

"...this book is "Going Clear" on steroids, filled with documented true tales of intrigue & jaw dropping escapades over decades of previously..." Read more

"Definitive and Damning Classic..." Read more

3 customers mention "Cult content"0 positive3 negative

Customers find the cult content in the book very destructive, abusive, and revolting. They also mention that Scientology is dysfunctional and has committed crimes such as espionage, malicious libel, and infiltration of the government.

"...Not only exposed were crimes such as espionage, malicious libel, infiltration of government bodies and persecution of organizations and businesses,..." Read more

"Everyone should read this. Scientology is a very destructive cult." Read more

"Hubbard and Scientology Dysfunctional and Abusive..." Read more

What a great overview of how the fraud of L Ron Hubbard ...
5 out of 5 stars
What a great overview of how the fraud of L Ron Hubbard ...
What a great overview of how the fraud of L Ron Hubbard built his destructive cult and harmed millions of people with his lies and extortion. Jon Atack did an amazing job to provide the facts that Scientology hides
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2014
In Jon Atack’s “A Piece of Blue Sky”, Atack addresses the issues within Scientology such as the pseudoscience of Dianetics, the corruption of the Church of Scientology, and the cynical L. Ron Hubbard. The author, a member of the church turned skeptic, holds an objective view on these matters and provides details from many sources, making him a reliable resource of information on an otherwise mysterious subject. The book starts off with a credulous tone as the author relays his experience with the church when he was a young adult but slowly transitions into a skeptical tone as the cracks begin to show in the reasoning of Dianetics and Scientology. This book reveals the ugly truth about what seemed like ideas that were meant help people but were actually just scams supported by pseudoscience that L. Ron Hubbard created. Believers and skeptics alike should read this book as it provides a lot of insight into one of the most successful scams of all time.
Atack does an impressive job of conveying his experiences with the church in a logical, chronological manner without compromising the objectivity of his writing. In the beginning, the author finds himself feeling dejected and is able relieve his pain through the comforting atmosphere of Scientology. Scientology, or more so Dianetics, offered him a cure to all of his pain so naturally he accepted these ideas with open arms. Throughout the book, Atack begins catching some startling subtleties that begin to alert him to some disconcerting aspects of the ideas of the man he practically worshiped, L. Ron Hubbard. As he progresses further and further through the church’s levels of initiation, he notices more flaws such as his experiences of mental abuse, the outrageous price fluctuations of different Scientology amenities and Dianetic auditing, and the scientific shortcomings in the background and evolution of Dianetics. Atack even explains the numerous fabrications Hubbard provides in his background from the specifics of his service in World War II to the data he provided in his “scientific research” on Dianetics. Atack effectively exposes the errors in Hubbard’s background and his concepts of Dianetics and Scientology; Atack uses personal experiences to prove his points and remains unbiased so as not make it seem like he is attacking the views of Scientologists. Atack successfully connects his personal experiences to the facts pertaining to Hubbard and Scientology. This connection makes the book easy to read and the points supporting the main idea easy to put together. Atack goes into great detail about each subject-Scientology, Hubbard, and Dianetics-which allows the reader to make a confident, informed decision about each. Atack could definitely be considered an authority figure on the matter but he chooses to keep his opinions out of it, letting the reader feel like they are in control.
At a glance, this book may not seem like it is debunking pseudoscience but more like the author is uncovering a scam. The author is mainly uncovering a scam but this scam would be nothing without the support of Hubbard’s made up pseudoscientific jargon that made these ideas so convincing. Atack gradually dissects the components of Dianetics and Scientology, revealing absolute nonsense when Hubbard’s actual scientific terms are put into context. If it were not for the original ideas of Dianetics-a classic example of pseudoscience-Scientology would have never succeeded because Dianetics contained all of the so-called “reasoning” for the religion. The book contains dialogue of actual statements that Hubbard made about the church and Dianetics that are absolutely outrageous. Even the book’s title is a quote straight from Hubbard’s mouth that excellently represents his intentions in creating Scientology and Dianetics. This book is great point of reference for a psychological study because it shows people’s willingness to believe in something so far fetched if it just has some big complicated words to back it up. Atack includes astonishing statistics about the prices of Scientology and Dianetic services and how much the Church of Scientology collected due to the gullibility of the followers of a retired science fiction writer. The author reveals how the church would deceive people by producing false statitistics on how many people joined the church, how many people had been cured through Dianetics, and how much people would have to pay to progress through church. The book includes details about smaller, yet important aspects of Dianetics and Scientology such as engrams, auditing, Operating Thetan Levels, and the use of the E-Meter. Nearly everything Atack includes in this book contributes to the main idea of the book, which is the exposure of Hubbard and his creation of Scientology and Dianetics.
This book is a must read for anyone interested in Dianetics, Scientology, L. Ron Hubbard, or anyone who is a member of the Church of Scientology. This book gives you the cold, hard facts with information directly from the church and Hubbard himself. Atack’s interactive approach to this book is very effective in helping the reader feel apart of the story and motivating the reader to read and learn more about the subject. He tells you his complete story, gives you all facts, and makes the writing objective enough for the reader to form their own opinion on the matter after reading. The book does not feel like it is forcing you to think one way or another; it just informs the reader on what Hubbard tried to hide from his followers for decades. This book provided the thrill of a fiction novel but with all the facts and first hand experience detail of a true story. “A Piece of Blue Sky” is a truly great book that is well written on an interesting topic and is sure to provide new, eye-opening information to anyone who reads it.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2014
My Review of ...a Piece of Blue Sky by Jon Atack

I was led to explore Scientology after reading a biography of Tom Cruise. I remembered vaguely reading a bit of Dianetics in 1982 or so, which was given to me by an acquaintance and true believer who insisted it would change my life. I found it boring and somewhat off the wall. Then a scandal about Scientology in Toronto appeared in the news, but I didn't give it much attention until I saw that the 'religion' had been started by a science fiction writer, the same individual who had written the book. Again, although slightly interesting and amusing, I forgot about it as I went on with my life.

Cruise's biographer mentioned that Scientology was a very big part of his life and he was using his celebrity status to proselytize. That did catch my interest and so I began reading some books on the subject, pro and con, including this one. I chose it first because it was written prior to the others.

I was horrified and sickened by what I read, about the crimes and atrocities that were committed, in particular by its core membership, the Sea Org. Not only exposed were crimes such as espionage, malicious libel, infiltration of government bodies and persecution of organizations and businesses, but also harassment of individual private citizens, including writers and reporters who dared to criticize Scientology. These, and perhaps even more maliciously, were also perpetrated against the cult's own membership.

This begged the question: If the religion was so wonderful, so liberating, so superior spiritually, why would it persecute its members who wished to leave it for one reason or another? Why engage in such activities such as kidnapping, imprisonment, unlawful detainment, physical violence - even toward its executive command, and why would its membership condone and excuse this? I found this shocking, revolting and reminiscent of the former Soviet Union and Maoist China. I could never understand that practice. If communism was such a superior way to live, why did many of its citizens continually try to escape? Why would the leaders of their countries punish, imprison, torture and even kill those who wanted to leave? The same frame of mind and the virtually identical practices also seem to apply to this cult.

Why do they do this? Shame. Embarrassment . Fear of ridicule in the eyes of the world and of their leaders starkly and undeniably being viewed as 'emperors without clothes', revealed in naked abhorrence and their systems of government as corrupt to the core and unsustainable. They also did not want the crimes perpetrated on their own citizens and their espionage in other countries exposed to the world. This scenario applies to Scientology almost exactly.

As I continued reading, it was revealed that many of its members were afraid to leave Scientology and chose to remain - if it could be said that such a choice existed - simply because they live in fear of their own leader and his vicious vindictive temper. They are coerced to stay through the threat of being separated, often permanently, from their own families still inside, and worst of all, from their own children. They fear incarceration and violence, physical and emotional. They also live in terror of their deepest most shameful secrets being released publicly, including being mailed to their neighbours and posted on poles and in businesses in the main streets of the towns that they and their children live in.

At first, I didn't know whether to believe all this or not, as these accounts were so unbelievably outrageous, so I continued reading other books and watching videos, including Scientology's own. Some members, like Tom Cruise and other celebrities had embraced it on their own, their treatment being completely differently from the rank-and-file members, while some had been brought into it by parents and had no choice in the decision. This would explain why certain celebrities deny such criminal abuse occurs. All members are directed not to read or watch anything about Scientology in the media, including them.

This book is a shocking expose, but long overdue at the time, a stark and courageous attempt by the author to reveal the worm of corruption at the organization's heart.

As I began reading other books, namely Janet Reitman's and Lawrence Wright's, both of which are excellent as well, I sometimes thought I was back reading this author's book since much of their work seemed taken directly from this one, and, sometimes it seemed to me, almost verbatim in some sections. I kept thinking haven't I just read this recently?

He's done a remarkable job. His research is top notch. His courage is to be commended for even undertaking such an expose.

There are so many things I want to comment on, but this isn't the place. If you are interested in learning more about this corporate business (I cannot bring myself to call it a 'church'),and and are contemplating whether to buy this book, do it, and do it before you read other accounts. If you are contemplating becoming a member of this cult, read this first. It was written and published a few decades ago and this is the revised version that many agree is better even than the first. In fact, after having read a few other, also very well written accounts, I still think this is the best of the lot.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2013
This is the comprehensive, well documented reference text for those who need the whole story. Some others cover more of the early history, others present a particular point of view or are personal stories. This tells the full story with a better picture of what is going on "behind the scenes". Those who lived this bit of history weren't told WHY they were being pressed to get certain projects done or abandon others. It is eye-opening and cathartic to know what was really going on.

The author literally went through hell to tell this story. I salute him and thank him with all my heart for his courage and commitment to tell the truth, despite all odds.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2014
A very interesting read. Unfortunately the Kindle ed has some issues--there are many areas where Hubbard or other sources are quoted, and the Kindle ed does not italicize or inset them in any way, making it difficult to see clearly where quoted passages begin and end. Also some strange places where a paragraph will be repeated nearly word for word, but with minor phrasing changes--as if paragraph was edited, but old version left in as well. Overall Atack is very thorough and well documented in his analysis of the topic; absolutely worth reading for anyone interested in how Scientology came to be what it is today.
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Top reviews from other countries

Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Facts can be stranger then fiction
Reviewed in Canada on August 28, 2023
The exploits of L Ron's creation read more like a comic book them a factual account ( were the guerrilla and infiltration tactics of Fightclub inspired by these real events?). The depiction of how children were treated really show's how warped their reality tunnel is
Matthew Denny
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely outstanding!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 4, 2024
Incredible in depth account of Hubbard and Scientology I've ever read. A truly inspiring and revealing read from start to finish.
Liam
5.0 out of 5 stars Tough going but worth the journey
Reviewed in Australia on February 7, 2024
It is an extremely thorough look into the subject and very entertaining.
Lots of information to digest, but written in a manner I found easy enough to follow and very interesting and informative.
Good read
Reg Gilroy
5.0 out of 5 stars Thorough and informative.
Reviewed in Australia on November 19, 2017
Very detailed and honest.
A detailed account of how Scientology has evolved to what it is today.
Highly recommended as a basic book on understanding The Church of Scientology and L. Ron Hubbard.
Fred
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting!
Reviewed in Canada on January 30, 2015
Insightful history of L Ron Hubbard and Scientology. The author does go a little bit far into detail at times but every aspect of the person and the organization is covered. If you are going to buy only one book about the subject, this should be it.