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Lawrence Wright's "Going Clear" on New York Times Bestseller List!

Smurf

Gold Meritorious SP
Re: Lawrence Wright's new book January release date

Lawrence Wright's long look at Scientology, Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood & the Prison of Belief, is set for release tomorrow, and reviews, for the most part, have been overwhelmingly positive. But why?

Lawrence is only the latest high-profile investigation into the underbelly of Scientology, following big heaves by St. Petersburg (now Tampa Bay) Times and Janet Reitman's landmark book Inside Scientology. While those who have read Wright's effort already have not reported any bombshell revelations, they are full of raves. How does it stand out?

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/ente...ence-wrights-scientology-book-so-great/61063/
 

Anonycat

Crusader
Re: Lawrence Wright's new book January release date

Lawrence Wright's long look at Scientology, Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood & the Prison of Belief, is set for release tomorrow, and reviews, for the most part, have been overwhelmingly positive. But why?

Lawrence is only the latest high-profile investigation into the underbelly of Scientology, following big heaves by St. Petersburg (now Tampa Bay) Times and Janet Reitman's landmark book Inside Scientology. While those who have read Wright's effort already have not reported any bombshell revelations, they are full of raves. How does it stand out?

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/ente...ence-wrights-scientology-book-so-great/61063/

I guess they are SPs!

Why People Are Saying Lawrence Wright's Scientology Book Is So Great
 

smartone

My Own Boss

Anonycat

Crusader
Re: Nice little article

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/shortcuts/2013/jan/14/cant-read-scientology-book-uk


Why can't we read the Scientology book Going Clear in the UK?

Lawrence Wright's book Going Clear reveals the depths of the weirdness of L Ron Hubbard's sci-fi religion. Or so we are told

:coolwink:

It was supposedly because they backed down to legal threats, but all they did was add what any retail item benefits from: rarity, even if only perceived. Amazon UK ships it.
 

ILove2Lurk

Lisbeth Salander
Re: Lawrence Wright's new book January release date

GoingClear.jpg


Upcoming Lawrence Wright interview / podcast


The Leonard Lopate Show

Wednesday, January 23

http://www.wnyc.org/shows/lopate/2013/jan/23/
 

Wants2Talk

Silver Meritorious Patron
Re: Lawrence Wright's new book January release date

From SALON


Thursday, Jan 17, 2013 1:00 AM UTC
“Going Clear”: Scientology exposed

http://www.salon.com/2013/01/17/going_clear_scientology_exposed/


Several years ago, for a series of Salon articles about Scientology, I was asked to review the founding text of the church, “Dianetics” by L.Ron Hubbard, first published in 1950. The book seemed so clearly the work of a man suffering from particular and pronounced mental health issues that I became, for the first time, curious about its author. Like most self-help books, “Dianetics” frequently invokes case histories or hypothetical scenarios, but unlike most self-help books, Hubbard’s stories featured an alarming amount of violence, specifically domestic violence.

Over and over, when imagining a childhood source for an individual’s problems, Hubbard spins tales of unfaithful wives and husbands who beat and verbally abuse them, sometimes kicking their pregnant bellies. Perhaps we can attribute some of this to a preoccupation with prenatal trauma; “Dianetics” insists that fetuses can understand damaging statements made to the women carrying them. Nevertheless, to me, the most striking thing about the book — besides Hubbard’s belief that it is “not uncommon” for women to make “twenty or thirty” attempts at a self-induced abortion with orange sticks and other implements — is its author’s assumption that such beatings are a commonplace aspect of most people’s home lives.

I wanted to find out if Hubbard had grown up amid such abuse, or had experience of it in his adult life, so I went online to poke around. What I found, on assorted anti-Scientology websites and discussion forums, seemed so outlandish and extreme that I decided not to refer to those charges at all in my review. I couldn’t be sure they were substantiated.

Scientology has involved preposterous claims from the very start — from before the very start, actually, since “Dianetics” (published two years before the foundation of the church) promises that a “clear” (an individual who has succeeded in using the Dianetic “technology” to free him- or herself of all impairing “engrams”) will attain assorted superpowers. These include healing his or her own disabilities and illnesses, as well as perfect recall, the capacity to perform “mental computations” at lightning speeds and various forms of mind reading and control. Scientology’s critics, on the other hand, accused Hubbard of — yes — domestic violence (including an incident in which he demanded that his second wife kill herself to prove she really loved him), to bigamy, lying about his service in World War II, engaging in black magic rituals and throwing followers who displeased him off the high deck of his ship. The church has countered such attacks by flinging accusations at its critics, from public drunkenness to adultery and homosexuality.

The whole mess seemed like a seething farrago of bizarre fantasies, vendettas and nightmares, indistinguishable from whatever grains of truth lingered here and there. A phenomenally diligent and rigorous investigator could probably sort it all out, but the Church of Scientology is notorious for using nuisance litigation to hound skeptical journalists to the brink of destitution and despair. Who’d be up for that?

Lawrence Wright was, and my long preamble is all by way of explaining why his new book, “Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood and the Prison of Belief,” is so invaluable. There have been other exposés of the church — including last year’s fine “Inside Scientology: The Story of America’s Most Secretive Religion” by Janet Reitman, a book Wright praises in his own — but this one carries the imprimatur of both Wright, a Pulitzer Prize-winner, and the New Yorker magazine, where Wright first wrote about the church in a story on its cultivation of celebrity members, as exemplified by movie director Paul Haggis.

The church adopted its scorched-earth policy toward critical journalists back when Paulette Cooper published “The Scandal of Scientology” in 1971; she was subsequently slapped with 19 lawsuits, as well as subjected to a harassment campaign with the stated intention of seeing her “incarcerated in a mental institution or jail.” What the organization did not foresee was that the effectiveness of such tactics could never be more than short-term. So ominous is the reputation of the Church of Scientology in this respect that when a major news organization of legendary rigor committed itself to an exposé, there could be no doubt that it was fact-checked to a fare-thee-well. The result, extended to book form by one of that organization’s most esteemed journalists, is completely and conclusively damning.

...
 

ChurchOfCylontology

Patron with Honors
Re: Lawrence Wright's new book January release date

I wonder where, oh where, our little boy Tommy Cruise has gone?

He must be in hiding somewhere. His PR people must be working overtime trying to keep him under wraps, and they are going to have a helluva time trying to book interviews for him to sell any of his upcoming movies because Cruise will refuse interviews if the Scientology topic is raised but he's probably contractually obligated to do PR promotions.

This is gonna get good.
 

Danger Mouse

Patron with Honors
Re: Lawrence Wright's new book January release date

I bought the book about two hours ago at Barnes & Noble and am now on page 74.

I have not previously read anything from Wright other than his New Yorker article, but so far, it has been the best overview of Hubbard's life and works that I have ever read. The book opens with Paul Haggis' story up until the day he read the confidential OT III materials, and then pivots into a definitive biography of L. Ron Hubbard.

Often these anti-Scientology books are like Tolkien's description of books that hobbits like: full of things we already knew, set down fair & square with no contradictions. I am happy to have already found a few things that I had not previously known about:

1) Wright tracked down the famous "Snake" Thompson's published articles, which contain many of the elements of Dianetics. Previously, several authors had speculated that Hubbard might have invented this colorful character.

2) There are several quotations from the second Mrs. Hubbard recorded shortly before her death (for the Stephen A. Kent Collection on Alternative Religions). She was interviewed previously for the book "L. Ron Hubbard: Messiah or Madman" but I found the new quotations fascinating as well.

Though I'm only a fifth of the way through, I am impressed with the book. It is well-organized, well-researched, and well-written. Wright has great insights into the subject. For example, he makes one extremely important but often-overlooked point on page 64: "The profession of psychiatry, meantime, had entered a period of brutal experimentation, characterized by the widespread practice of lobotomies and electroshock therapy." In 1950, Dianetics must have been seen as very benign compared to Dr. Freeman's ice-pick lobotomies of that period.

Well, I've got to take a break from writing about it so I can go back to reading it!
 

Boson Wog Stark

Patron Meritorious
Re: Lawrence Wright's new book January release date

From SALON


Thursday, Jan 17, 2013 1:00 AM UTC
“Going Clear”: Scientology exposed

http://www.salon.com/2013/01/17/going_clear_scientology_exposed/

In this wonderful review, she also said, "All of it makes for a wild ride of a page-turner, as enthralling as a paperback thriller."

Yeah! :biggrin: I just hope it strikes the general public with that same quality. It has to. He's a great writer. Top of the Best Seller list here we come?
 

Anonycat

Crusader
NYTimes: Going Clear review

That crunching sound you hear is Lawrence Wright bending over backward to be fair to Scientology. Every deceptive comparison with Mormonism and other religions is given a respectful hearing. Every ludicrous bit of church dogma is served up deadpan. This makes the book’s indictment that much more powerful. Open almost any page at random. That tape of L. Ron Hubbard, Scientology’s founder, that Wright quotes from? “It was a part of a lecture Hubbard gave in 1963, in which he talked about the between-lives period, when thetans are transported to Venus to have their memories erased.”

Oh, that period. Of course. How could I forget?

We are all thetans, spirits, trapped temporarily in our current particular lives. Elsewhere, though, Hubbard says that when a thetan discovers that he is dead, he should report to a “‘between-lives’ area” on Mars for a “forgetter implant.”

Oh dear, oh dear. So what are poor thetans to do, where are they to go, when they find themselves between lives? Left to Venus or right to Mars? For sure, they can’t stay here. “The planet Earth, formerly called Teegeeack, was part of a confederation of planets under the leadership of a despot ruler named Xenu,” said Hubbard, who was a best-selling science fiction writer before he became the prophet of a new religion. To suppress a rebellion, Xenu tricked the confederations into coming in for fake income tax investigations. Billions of thetans were taken to Teegeeack (you remember: Earth), “where they were dropped into volcanoes and then blown up with hydrogen bombs.” Suffice it to say I’m not hanging around Earth next time I’m between lives.

0120-Kinsley-articleInline.jpg


Full article: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/20/b...-book-on-scientology.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
 

Anonycat

Crusader
Re: NYTimes: Going Clear review

John Travolta Wanted to Marry Boyfriend, Ditch Scientology

JOHN Travolta almost turned his back on Scientology so he could run off and marry his boyfriend, according to new anti-Scientology book Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, & the Prison of Belief.

In the book, by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Lawrence Wright, it’s claimed a young Travolta had grown disenchanted with the church in the early ’80s but was afraid that officials would expose him as gay if he tried to leave.

It’s believed the Grease star confessed his homosexuality during church-run “auditing,” or coun­seling sessions, according to the book’s author.

Full article: http://www.showbizspy.com/article/2...ted-to-marry-boyfriend-ditch-scientology.html
 

Anonycat

Crusader
Re: NYTimes: Going Clear review

The Church of Scientology's week from hell

On Thursday 17 January, the US reading public will be able to purchase what could be the most damning exposé ever written on the inner workings of the Church of Scientology. And although the “religion” has tried to use its muscle and resources to fight back, the onslaught is coming from all sides. Could this be the beginning of Scientology’s end?

Full article: http://dailymaverick.co.za/article/2013-01-17-the-church-of-scientologys-week-from-hell
 

Purple Rain

Crusader
Re: NYTimes: Going Clear review

That crunching sound you hear is Lawrence Wright bending over backward to be fair to Scientology. Every deceptive comparison with Mormonism and other religions is given a respectful hearing. Every ludicrous bit of church dogma is served up deadpan. This makes the book’s indictment that much more powerful. Open almost any page at random. That tape of L. Ron Hubbard, Scientology’s founder, that Wright quotes from? “It was a part of a lecture Hubbard gave in 1963, in which he talked about the between-lives period, when thetans are transported to Venus to have their memories erased.”

Oh, that period. Of course. How could I forget?

We are all thetans, spirits, trapped temporarily in our current particular lives. Elsewhere, though, Hubbard says that when a thetan discovers that he is dead, he should report to a “‘between-lives’ area” on Mars for a “forgetter implant.”

Oh dear, oh dear. So what are poor thetans to do, where are they to go, when they find themselves between lives? Left to Venus or right to Mars? For sure, they can’t stay here. “The planet Earth, formerly called Teegeeack, was part of a confederation of planets under the leadership of a despot ruler named Xenu,” said Hubbard, who was a best-selling science fiction writer before he became the prophet of a new religion. To suppress a rebellion, Xenu tricked the confederations into coming in for fake income tax investigations. Billions of thetans were taken to Teegeeack (you remember: Earth), “where they were dropped into volcanoes and then blown up with hydrogen bombs.” Suffice it to say I’m not hanging around Earth next time I’m between lives.

0120-Kinsley-articleInline.jpg


Full article: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/20/b...-book-on-scientology.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

Just off to read that article but, in the meantime, that picture is awesome!!
 

AnonyMary

Formerly Fooled - Finally Free
Re: NYTimes: Going Clear review

Best analogy of Scientology by a high profile newspaper:

Eyes Wide Shut
‘Going Clear,’ Lawrence Wright’s Book on Scientology
By MICHAEL KINSLEY, New York Times Published: January 17, 2013
[..]
But Wright’s book, “Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief,” makes clear that Scientology is like no church on Earth (or, in all probability, Venus or Mars either). The closest institutional parallel would be the Communist Party in its heyday: the ruthless struggles for power, the show trials and forced confessions (often false); the paranoia (often justified); the determination to control its members’ lives completely (the key difference, you will recall, between authoritarian and totalitarian regimes, according to the onetime American ambassador to the United Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick); the maintenance of something close to prison camps where dissenters, would-be defectors and power-struggle rivals were incarcerated in deplorable conditions for years and punished if they tried to escape; [..]
 
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