Reviews
"The first solid history of the Temple...less a warning about the dangers of religosity than a clear headed chronology." -- San Francisco magazine, "Julia Scheeres' A Thousand Lives ... tells the tragic tale of Jonestown -- in its way, a peculiarly American apocalypse." -- L.A. Times, "How do you tell a new story about Jim Jones and his followers, when everyone knows how it ends? ...Julia Scheeres' riveting A Thousand Lives gives us reason to look again. " -- Miami He rald, "Scheeres shows great compassion and journalistic skill in reconstructing Jonestown's last months and the lives of many Temple members (including a few survivors)...[ A Thousand Lives is a] well-written, disturbing tale of faith and evil." -- Kirkus, "Chilling and heart-wrenching, this is a brilliant testament to Jones's victims, so many of whom were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time." -- Publisher's Weekly , starred review, "The definitive book on Jonestown and the Danse Macabre of suicide and murder orchestrated by mad Jim Jones. Julia Scheeres takes us by the hand and leads us gently, inexorably, into the darkness." Tim Cahill, author of Lost in My Own Backyard, "Julia Scheeres's book sheds startling new light on this murky, mini-chapter of contemporary history....the narrative is [a] compelling...psychological mystery." -- The Wall Street Journal, "Jonestown has become a grim metaphor for blind obediencefor fanaticism without regard to consequences. In the aptly titled A Thousand Lives , Julia Scheeres captures the humanity within this terrible story, vividly depicting individuals trapped in a vortex of hope and fear, faith and loss of faith, not to mention the changes sweeping America in the 1960s and '70s. She makes their journeys to that unfathomable tragedy all too ℜ what was truly incredible, she shows, was the escape from death by a tiny handful of survivors. Drawing on a mountain of sources compiled and recently released by the FBI, she changes forever the way we think about this dark chapter of our history." T.J. Stiles, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbil t, "For those who can picture only the gory end of Jonestown, Julia Scheeres offers a heartbreaking and often inspiring glimpse of what might have been. Her masterfully told and exhaustively researched A Thousand Lives should stand not only as the definitive word on Jones' horrific machinations, but on the utopian dreams of a bygone generation. A worthy follow-up to her superb memoir, Jesus Land ." -- Tom Barbash, author of On Top of the World: Cantor Fitzgerald, Howard Lutnick, and 9/11: A Story of Loss and Renewal