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Werken van Tim Reiterman

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Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1947
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
USA
Opleiding
University of California, Berkeley
Beroepen
journalist

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Jim Jones was in many ways a product of our culture. He took what was trendy and popular and used it to get a free pass in his twisted need to control others and validate himself. This book is well researched but a bit of a slog. Healthy skepticism would have possibly protected most of his utopian hungry victims, something we are in short supply of even today. I would argue that Jones really was a man of the left although he garnered victims from both left and right.
 
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SamTekoa | 9 andere besprekingen | Feb 28, 2021 |
The saga of Jim Jones and Peoples Temple is unaccountably bizarre in every respect, from Jones' shady beginnings as a street preacher in 1940s Indiana to the apparently senseless horror of Jonestown three decades later. There are many lingering questions about Jones and his quasi-Marxist church; unfortunately, the answers are nowhere to be found in Raven. It's a monster of a book (nearly seven hundred pages), and it does dispel the popular misconception of Jones' followers as mindless fanatics by painting a sympathetic group portrait of them as the human beings they actually were, but Tim Reiterman glosses over numerous strange events in Jones' life, thereby reducing the story to a real-life soap opera about a megalomaniac and his tragically misguided disciples.

Is it possible that Jones' long association with CIA undercover operative Dan Mitrione meant nothing? Yes, but Reiterman doesn't even mention Mitrione. 913 Americans died at Jonestown (the heaviest loss of American civilian lives prior to 9/11), but the U.S. State Department proposed burying all the bodies in a mass grave in Guyana and, even when the bodies wound up being flown back home for burial, balked at performing autopsies. Why? The drugs that Jones used to weaken the resistance of his followers happen to have been the same substances used on unwilling test subjects by the CIA in its MK-ULTRA mind control experiments. How did Jones obtain such large quantities of these drugs? Why did the State Department refuse to intervene at Jonestown even after numerous reports of abuse (including a sworn affidavit from a former member of Peoples Temple) had emerged? The ingestion of cyanide causes violent convulsions, so how had the bodies come to be arranged in neat, face-down rows by the time they were photographed? Is it just a coincidence that Congressman Leo Ryan, a vocal critic of the CIA, was assassinated in this setting?

The author (one of the journalists who accompanied Ryan to Guyana, and who survived the airstrip shooting that killed Ryan and four others) never really addresses these mysteries. He's a good writer and a determined researcher, but he's also selective: of far more interest to Reiterman than the troubling inconsistencies of the official Jonestown narrative are Jones' slow psychological dissolution and the personal histories of his followers. Do these things belong in the book? Of course they do, and quite often they make for engrossing reading (which is why I've given Raven a four-star rating). But they don't tell the whole story. Bearing that in mind, Reiterman's account is still a good place to start if you're new to the subject.
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Jonathan_M | 9 andere besprekingen | Mar 29, 2016 |
The Jonestown Massacre gave me nightmares as a sixteen year-old and it still has the ability to haunt today. This eyewitness account of the tragedy and the long chain of bizarre events that led up it answers every question but one - how could such a sick, paranoid megalomaniac get such a complete grip on the lives of others? The only answer to that question remains unsatisfactory but it's the only answer - there's a lot of stupid, gullible, needy people out there who will believe anything.

For those of us who lived through those times it's almost a requirement to ask who was the bigger madman, Jones or Manson? For my money, it's Jim Jones.
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5hrdrive | 9 andere besprekingen | Oct 6, 2015 |
Interesting interview with Reiterman and Deborah Layton, author of [b:Seductive Poison A Jonestown Survivor's Story of Life and Death in the People's Temple|345220|Seductive Poison A Jonestown Survivor's Story of Life and Death in the People's Temple|Deborah Layton|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1173919622s/345220.jpg|1537530] on KQED. Reminded me of a very important book I read several years ago by John Hall [b:Gone from the Promised Land Jonestown in American Cultural History|470329|Gone from the Promised Land Jonestown in American Cultural History|John Hall|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1175029543s/470329.jpg|458635], an excellent book.… (meer)
 
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ecw0647 | 9 andere besprekingen | Sep 30, 2013 |

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Werken
1
Leden
290
Populariteit
#80,656
Waardering
½ 4.4
Besprekingen
10
ISBNs
7
Talen
1

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