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A Thousand Lives: The Untold Story of Hope, Deception, and Survival at Jonestown

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3.99  ·  Rating details ·  4,634 ratings  ·  763 reviews
In 1954, a pastor named Jim Jones opened a church in Indianapolis called Peoples Temple Full Gospel Church. He was a charismatic preacher with idealistic beliefs, and he quickly filled his pews with an audience eager to hear his sermons on social justice. As Jones’s behavior became erratic and his message more ominous, his followers leaned on each other to recapture the se ...more
ebook, 320 pages
Published October 11th 2011 by Free Press
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Yesenia Cordero I can say that I definitely was. I also could not believe that a thousand people could be so persuaded by one person to take their own lives, but I no…moreI can say that I definitely was. I also could not believe that a thousand people could be so persuaded by one person to take their own lives, but I now see exactly how it happened. The first time I read it, I was in disbelief for the longest time, telling the story of Jonestown to every and any one who would listen to me. I don't think I actually wanted others to hear me, I just wanted to lay it out before myself and try to make sense of it. Then I reread the book for a school presentation, and I almost could not go through with it because of the disbelief and disgust I felt for what had happened, at the hands of this manipulative "pastor". And despite all the 'good-job's I was getting from people, after the presentation, the best I could do was sit and stare at nothing in particular. That book pulled me completely into a history that was both fascinating and disturbing, and it took a while to pull myself back out. So, in the end, I could say, YES. I have been very, very moved by the book.(less)

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Petra trying not to complain, criticise or compare
Update I finished the book. I don't think it was the definitive story of what happened in Jonestown even though it is probably the most exhaustive. There was too much personal interpretation by the author that was based on her emotional interpretation of the evidence (of which there was plenty) rather than any proper analysis. This isn't necessarily wrong, it's her book. But it doesn't, to me, explain how and why the majority of people committed murder/suicide and why the church in San Francisco ...more
Shaun
Death is not a fearful thing, it's living that's treacherous.
Jim Jones November 18, 1978

I was only seven when the massacre/mass suicide at Jonestown occurred, and while I always had a general sense of what happened, until reading this book, I lacked a true appreciation for the magnitude and bizarre nature of this tragedy.

From champion of the oppressed to drug-addled megalomaniac, Jim Jones was an enigma on many fronts. He started off speaking out against racism and segregation, and promoti
...more
Regina
This is a well-researched and docuemnted book detailing the lives of Jim Jones's followers. The narrative is based on 50,000 pages of documents (diaries, notes, etc) released by the FBI and seized from Jonestown. The author has a good voice and is able to convey both Jim Jones's persuasiveness, at least his persuasiveness in the beginning, and the entrapped feeling his followers must have felt. I knew of the Jonestown tragedy since I was a kid, but I had always thought it was a willing mass suic ...more
Nancy
Aug 01, 2011 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
The Jonestown tragedy happened the week of my 13th birthday. At the time I remember the nation being stunned and the news stations reporting the details as they came available but the impact on an adolescent girl was less than cosmic. As I finished this book as a much older person I had a much different experience.

Combing threw tens of thousands of documents released to the public and also from tapes already public, the author pieced together Jim Jones' troubled childhood, his conversion to Evan
...more
Ryandake
Apr 27, 2013 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
this review refers to the audiobook version.

not the sort of book you can get some lively party chat out of, if you plan to get invited back.

Julia Scheeres has some unique credentials for writing about Jonestown: she and her adopted (black) brother were incarcerated in a fundamentalist Christian reform school in the Dominican Republic as adolescents. i can't think of another experience that would have so many resonances with Jonestown: coercion, powerlessness, religion, racial issues, sexism, bei
...more
britt_brooke
Beyond conducting survivor interviews, Scheeres pieced together diary entries, letters, depositions, FBI interviews, and numerous tape recordings found at Jonestown to give us an in-depth look at the Peoples Temple, largely focusing on details about certain members. These accounts provide explicit information I’d never read before. It was totally horrifying to learn details of how the revolutionary suicide was carried out and just how erratic a doped up Jim Jones had become. The survivor stories ...more
Kurt
Sep 06, 2011 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Kurt by: Amazon Vine
Like many people born in 1980 or later, I grew up with a vague notion of Jonestown as a weird town in a jungle where a bunch of people in a cult drank poison Kool-Aid and died. I use the term “drink the Kool-Aid” when I refer to someone completely buying in to an idea or a cause. But until I read this book, I never really knew what Jonestown was all about.

Scheeres provides a service in this book, both as a skillful historian and as a compassionate human being. She synthesizes hours of audio reco
...more
Shauna
Oct 02, 2012 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Obviously, some of my nonfiction tastes aren't for everybody; this work is fascinating and disturbing. The author had access to a huge trove of documents, audiotapes, photographs and more relating to Jonestown soon after they were declassified by the FBI. Jonestown was the ex-pat American settlement in Guyana where 900 people died in a mass murder-suicide in November 1978. Scheeres' book strikes a careful balance in avoiding hype (believe me, this story doesn't need any) and sensationalism, and ...more
Matthew
Feb 24, 2021 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
I’d been hearing the term, or some version of it, seemingly since birth – certainly for as long as I’d been able to retain phrases of which I’d repeat as if they were my own. Its origin was insignificant. Hell, at first its meaning was, too. I never cared to know what had sparked its coinage; I just liked the way it sounded. Who could blame me? I was a wide-eyed, impressionable, naïve kid. Plus, I liked sugary drinks.

Later, this phrase became synonymous with my hometown’s professional football
...more
Vikki
Mar 11, 2013 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
A compassionate account of the Jonestown tragedy, A THOUSAND LIVES humanizes the victims rather than painting them as stupid, docile, mindless pawns. Scheeres shows us exactly how the monumentally flawed Jones was able to draw them into his quest for a socialist/agrarian utopia, and then, in his growing drug addiction and paranoia, keep them isolated, scared, hungry, weak and tired enough to stay -- and eventually to die. This book is heartbreaking, disturbing and utterly fascinating.
Liz Hein
Jan 14, 2021 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
I was pretty blind to the events of Jonestown until this book and I’m stunned. It was an eerie time to read this book as there are some parallels to be drawn to current events. It is a reminder that nobody joins a cult. Jim Jones preyed on marginalized people promising them a egalitarian society free from racism and all the other problems in America. Of course, what they got was lies, manipulation, torture, and death. Despite knowing the end from the beginning, the end was one of the most diffic ...more
Anna Janelle
Jun 01, 2012 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
I've been putting off this review because I'm fairly horrified by the contents of this non-fiction read. And by horrified, I mean that I had honest-to-God nightmares about Jonestown. Yes, I was familiar with the tragedy and I knew that an unprecedented number of people had died, but I had no clue as to the terror and abuse that led up to the fateful incident.

“I love socialism, and I’m willing to die to bring it about, but if I did, I’d take a thousand with me.” –Jim Jones, September 6, 1975.

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...more
Paige (Illegal in 3 Countries)
As usual, I devoured A Thousand Lives and even had a conversation with my mother about Jonestown. She was about fifteen when the mass murder-suicide occurred, so she still recalls news coverage of the event as details slowly made their way back to the American people. I haven’t gotten to read Raven, journalist and survivor Tim Reiterman’s seminal work on People’s Temple and Jonestown, but I will one of these days even though it lacks access to the recently-declassified documents Scheeres was abl ...more
Larry Bassett
Jun 05, 2016 rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: audio
Some of us remember that on November 18, 1978 909 people died in Jonestown Guyana where they had gone to live seeking an ideal community with Jim Jones. The peoples Temple began decades before that in Indianapolis Indiana, before moving to Ukiah California then to San Francisco and then the 1970s to South America. This was a predominantly black community although Jim Jones and much of the leadership were white. The book is based on documents and tape recordings that were found in Jonestown after ...more
Karla
Oct 08, 2015 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
I was only 3 when Jonestown happened, so I was raised on the pop culture term of "drinking the Kool-Aid." It really minimizes the true horror that was Jim Jones' manipulation of vulnerable, idealistic and, often, uneducated people.

After starting this book, I got on a Jonestown kick and also watched Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple and Jonestown: Paradise Lost . Fun times. :P
...more
Katherine
”’I love socialism, and I’m willing to die to bring it about, but if I did, I’d take a thousand with me.’”
I’m here to tell you right now that if you read this book, you’ll never look at religious prophets the same way ever again. But at the same time, it’s a book that demands to be read, especially at a time like this.

Back in the 1950s, a young preacher named Jim Jones started a church in Indianapolis. It quickly grew due to its welcoming nature of all people of races and colors in a time wh
...more
Athira (Reading on a Rainy Day)
In 1954, a pastor named Jim Jones opened a new church in Indianapolis called the Peoples Temple. Being charismatic and fully aware of how to influence people, he began preaching his idealistic beliefs and managed to quickly gather a good number of followers. Over the next twenty years, as the church moved from Indiana to California, and ultimately to its deathbed, Guyana, Jones would amass a huge number of followers, many willing to follow him to the ends of the earth, in the hopes of making the ...more
Carol
Sep 02, 2011 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
I vividly remember seeing news reports from the 1978 Jonestown massacre. I remember being especially perplexed at the notion that anyone could poison children, especially their own children, or that so many people could be induced to commit suicide together.

Scheeres has an interesting take on the issue: she is the author of Jesusland, a memoir in which she discusses her own upbringing as the child of conservative/fundamentalist Christian parents, including a time during which she and her brothe
...more
Dimity
This is easily one of the most disturbing books I’ve ever read. It’s disturbing not just for the obvious ick factor of being about a mass coerced suicide/murder but because Scheeres convincingly demonstrates that not all of the dead were crazy fanatics and that many were woefully manipulated and misled over a period of years by the charismatic (and surprisingly influential with various government officials) Jim Jones. I didn’t really know anything about Jonestown beyond its use as a punchline in ...more
Sara
I was fortunate to win a copy of this book on Goodreads, and boy, my excitement was well placed.

I thought I knew a lot about the Jonestown Massacre. I was wrong. This book put faces and personal stories and recollections on one of the worst murder-suicides in history, and that just made it that much spookier.

The author starts out the book stating she will not use the word "cult" unless it's in reference of a direct quote from one of her sources. This right away gave her some credibility in my ey
...more
LATOYA JOVENA
Sep 01, 2019 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
The people of Jonestown seems to be remember as brain washed cult members who decided to die for idiotic reasons. This is far from the truth. This book sheds light on the individuals who lived and died in Jonestown.
Meave
Nov 26, 2014 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
This was, of course, extremely upsetting. It's not a full explanation of Jonestown, if that's what you're looking for, because it focuses more on the members of Peoples Temple than Jones himself, and while I would have liked a little more detail as to how Jim Jones went from charismatic young faith healer to murderous dictator, but that is not what this book is for. This gives some of his victims a voice. It's awful and tragic and shocking, even though you know what happened, because you didn't ...more
Amber
Mar 16, 2017 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Jonestown is a thing that has pretty much always fascinated me, but this book is really well written and it's pretty heartbreaking at times. ...more
Zella Kate
Not the most comprehensive book on Jonestown but definitely the best at capturing the batshit crazy day-to-day life details of living under Jim Jones's control. Most books on Jonestown focus on Jim Jones, which is reasonable enough, but this one instead focuses on his victims/followers, a much-needed corrective to the usual narrative. I've read quite a bit on Jonestown and some of the stories and people introduced here were new to me. ...more
Karen
Jul 20, 2017 rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
Read this for my TPL bookclub. Interesting read about the crazy psychotic story of Jim Jones and his cult and the tragedy of the people that got swept up in it.
Lisa (Harmonybites)
I love socialism, and I’m willing to die to bring it about, but if I did, I’d take a thousand with me. - Jim Jones

This is about Jonestown, Jim Jones, and how he took almost a thousand lives. We remember it as a mass suicide, and the phrase "drinking the kool aid," has come to mean someone who mindlessly swallows lies and obeys because that's how the poison was administered. I think this is one of saddest stories I've read in a long time--and considering my recent reading has included tales of ge
...more
Paul Pessolano
Oct 26, 2011 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
“A Thousand Lives” by Julia Scheeres, published by Free Press.

Category – Religion/ Biography/True Crime

WOW and double WOW!!!!!! I read this book in one night finding it absolutely impossible to put down. If you were born after 1980 you probably have little or no knowledge of Jim Jones and the Jonestown murder/suicides; however that should not be a problem because the story is as real and poignant as it was back then.

Jim Jones became a Pentecostal preacher, starting in Indiana and moving to Calif
...more
MAP
Jul 29, 2017 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
This book follows the evolution of the People's Temple from a small church in Indianapolis all the way to the mass suicides in Guyana. It's, in general, a well-written book that lays out all the facts and most of the chronology. The progression is followed through a few select people's eyes - mostly survivors, but some others whose records allow them to tell their story from beyond the grave. The book doesn't pretend to be a biography of or psychological exploration of Jim Jones himself, which o ...more
Artnoose McMoose
Feb 10, 2012 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: anyone who feels too happy
Ugh. If you ever feel too happy and want to rectify that, read a book about Jonestown.

I'll date myself by saying that I was a very young child when the massacre happened. It was the first real-time tragedy I had encountered, and I was astounded that parents would kill their own children. I'm still astounded really, but this book (using declassified FBI documents) follows the members of this church throughout its development to show how vulnerable most of the people were who died in Jonestown.

Wh
...more
Jennifer W
Jun 18, 2012 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: non-fiction
How do you review a book like this? It is meticulously researched, the people's own words are on the pages. The years of abuse, rape, trauma, coercion and many, many lies are laid bare. To the outside viewer, clearly Jones was mad, but unfortunately, the people living at Jonestown didn't have that perspective. Even the ones who could rationally realize that something was desperately wrong had no recourse. They were trapped in a jungle with no money, no passports, and often would risk leaving the ...more
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I was born in Lafayette, Indiana and now live in the Bay Area. I'm the author of the memoir "Jesus Land," which was a New York Times and London Times bestseller and of the award-winning "A Thousand Lives: The Untold Story of Jonestown," which is being developed into a feature film. I teach memoir and creative nonfiction, online and in San Francisco, and work with private clients on book projects. ...more

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“Today, few Americans born after 1980 are familiar with the Jonestown tragedy, although anyone with an Internet connection can listen to the haunting tape of the community’s mass extinction. And while the phrase “drinking the Kool-Aid” has entered the cultural lexicon, its reference to gullibility and blind faith is a slap in the face of the Jonestown residents who were goaded into dying by the lies of Jim Jones, and, especially insulting to the 304 murdered children. As the FBI files clearly document, the community devolved into a living hell from which there was no escape.” 1 likes
“If anything, the people who moved to Jonestown should be remembered as noble idealists. They wanted to create a better, more equitable, society. They wanted their kids to be free of violence and racism. They rejected sexist gender roles. They believed in a dream. How terribly they were betrayed.” 1 likes
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