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When Men Become Gods: Mormon Polygamist Warren Jeffs, His Cult of Fear, and the Women Who Fought Back
When Men Become Gods: Mormon Polygamist Warren Jeffs, His Cult of Fear, and the Women Who Fought Back

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Author: Stephen Singular
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $12.99
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 16 reviews
Sales Rank: 189990

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.7 x 6.1 x 0.9

ISBN: 0312372485
Dewey Decimal Number: 306.8423092
EAN: 9780312372484
ASIN: 0312372485

Publication Date: April 21, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Stolen Innocence: My Story of Growing Up in a Polygamous Sect, Becoming a Teenage Bride, and Breaking Free of Warren Jeffs
  • Escape
  • His Favorite Wife: Trapped in Polygamy
  • God's Brothel: The Extortion of Sex for Salvation in Contemporary Mormon and Christian Fundamentalist Polygamy and the Stories of 18 Women Who Escaped
  • Banking on Heaven

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

In When Men Become Gods, New York Times bestselling author Stephen Singular casts a light on a dark corner of religious extremism. He reveals a group of fundamentalists operating in the present-day United States, where teenage girls are kept in virtual bondage in the name of upholding the “sacred principle” of polygamy.

As the leader and self-proclaimed prophet of the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints, a sect of Mormonism based in isolated southern Utah, Warren Jeffs held sway over thousands of followers for nearly a decade. His rule was utterly tyrannical. In addition to coercing young girls into polygamous marriages with older men, Jeffs reputedly took scores of wives, many of whom were his father’s widows. Television, radio, and newspapers were shunned, creating a hidden community where polygamy was prized above all else.

But in 2007, after a two-year manhunt that landed him on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted List, Jeffs’s reign was forcefully ended. He was convicted of rape as an accomplice for his role in arranging a marriage between a fourteen-year-old girl and her nineteen-year-old first cousin.

In When Men Become Gods, Edgar Award nominee Stephen Singular traces Jeffs’s rise to power and the concerted effort that led to his downfall. It was a movement championed by law enforcement, private investigators, the Feds, and perhaps most vocal of all, a group of former polygamous wives seeking to liberate young women from the arranged marriages they’d once endured. The book offers new revelations into a nearly impenetrable enclave---a place of nineteenth-century attire, inbreeding, and eerie seclusion---providing readers with a rare glimpse into a tradition that’s almost a century old, but that has only now been exposed.




Customer Reviews:   Read 11 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The PROPER way to deal with fundamentalists   May 19, 2008
 15 out of 17 found this review helpful

Singular here presents, with his customary thorough research and straightforward reporting, an example of using the process of law to deal with resolving differing religious beliefs and practices when they come into conflict with constitutional law. This book chronicles how the Utah and Arizona authorities overcame their mistakes in the 1953 raid on the FLDS community by carefully investigating the present situation at length and targeting only those individuals and specific acts which violated the law, and building a case. This stands in sharp contrast to the recent Texas raid on the Yearning For Zion ranch, which was an indiscriminate attack upon the FLDS way of life - a sledgehammer approach more like the 1953 raid.
By following individuals as the book progresses, Singular brings the reader into the narrative while explaining the legal processes at work. He does not pass judgment upon the basic beliefs of the FLDS, but does expose their practices of brainwashing, polygamy, and child molestation as well as their financial abuses.
In his afterword, he points out the parallels to the way we are dealing with other patriarchal cultures with differing religions abroad. When Men Become Gods is an examination of the difficult choices we must make at the intersection of freedom of religious beliefs and practices with human rights. If we are to live our Constitution, we must respect the rights of others and not let legal authority become a tyranny itself if we value our own freedoms.

In a time when understanding differing cultures has never been more important, this book has valuable insights to ponder.



5 out of 5 stars Excellent expose of cult leader Warren Jeffs   July 4, 2008
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

This book is an indepth look at the creation of the Fundementalist Church of the Latter Day Saints, the offshoot of traditional Mormonism that has its roots on the border of Arizona and Utah. This group has recently been in the news because after their move to Texas, the authorities there swept in and took away over 400 children in order to investigate charges of forced marriages by underage girls. While the case there has fizzled out, perhaps it wouldn't have if the entire country read this book. The FLDS embraced polygamy and left the LDS church when it abandoned it in return for Utah achieving statehood in the late 1890s. The people of Colorado City Arizona and Hildale Utah are deeply under the spell of their leader Warren Jeffs. Jeffs, who took command of the group after the death of his father, put the entire community under his spell and after reading and studying Hitler and Napoleon, began breaking up families and using his power to reward those most faithful to him. All of the property in the entire community was turned over to him, and the group "bled the beast" by taking hundreds of millions of dollars in state welfare aid each year. Women who fled the cult started exposing the dirty secrets of Jeffs: his 180 wives, girls married at the age of 14, schools closed down, young men kicked out of town so they wouldn't compete with the older men for wives. The sins of Jeffs are many, and Singular does a terrific job of enumerating them. He lays out the case that put Jeffs on the FBIs most wanted list and eventually brought about his capture. Jeffs was found guilty of abetting a rape in late 2007, and charges against him are still pending. Singular offers up some hope for the communities he writes about, but I wish that he had been able to give more information about the YFZ (Yearning for Zion) Ranch in Texas where many of the staunchest holdouts have taken refuge. For more information about this read Carolyn Jessop's fantastic memoir, Escape, and watch Laurie Allen's DVD Banking on Heaven. Taken all three together, they are excellent exposes of this cult-like group. I give this book 5 stars.


5 out of 5 stars Shocking, shocking and shocking!   June 10, 2008
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

This numbers among most of the most shocking books I have ever read and I am 71 years old and have read a great deal. It numbers right up there with works about the Holocaust, Soviet communism, and other disgusting things that have taken place in this world. I appreciate Mr. Singular's expose of the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints Church and I would warn regular Mormons that you are going to be painted with this brush, so climb down from your prissy perch. This stuff is going on in the USA!! For God's sake, somebody do something!! For one thing, read this book. I have started reading it the second time and will likely read it several more times.


5 out of 5 stars Strange is normal, Normal is strange.   May 21, 2008
 3 out of 10 found this review helpful

I wonder why when I was growing up watching "Peanuts" cartoons or watching a "Fred Astaire" movie life seemed so good natured, I don't know maybe I'm crazy. Tell me !, how can I rationalize any of these behaviors, raping a child is... raping a child, directly by action or indirectly by knowledge of. Talk about candy coated poison, G-d help us: there are so many of them and not enough of us. How else has this gone on for so long and continues happening even as you read this.


3 out of 5 stars badly needed ephemera   May 31, 2008
 3 out of 5 found this review helpful

The book, while advertised as being about "Propjet" Warren Jeffs, is primarily a history of the FLDS in Short Creek (Colorado City) AZ and its companion town of Hilldale, UT. While it is not of teh caliber of John Krakauer's UNDER THE BANNER OF HEAVEN, it picks up where Krakauer's book left off and as such is of great value.

The lack of an index and of supporting data makes it less valuable than it otherwise could be. Certainly the book is journalistic rather than academic, but I applaud singular's research and broad-minded point-of-view.


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