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Escape
Escape
Sep 23, 2024 4:22 AM

Author:Carolyn Jessop

Escape

THE HARROWING STORY OF ONE WOMAN'S ESCAPE FROM THE FUNDAMENTALIST CHURCH OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS

Aged eighteen, Carolyn Jessop was forced to marry a 50-year-old stranger and religious cult member.

She became one of 6 wives and bore him 8 children in 15 years. Forced to obey her controlling husband's every demand, she had no money and no power. But when Carolyn discovered that her twelve-year-old daughter had spent three days at the new cult leader's home, she knew she had to take her children and flee.

At thirty-five, Carolyn escaped. This is her harrowing - and ultimately triumphant - story.

'An amazing life event that Carolyn was brave enough to tell' Reader Review

'What an emotional rollercoaster it was reading this. Sadness, horror, disbelief, shock, excitement, hope' Reader Review

'Wow! Received this book in the morning, finished it by evening' Reader Review

Reviews

Anyone who is concerned about the future of democracy should read this brisk, accessible book. Anyone who is not concerned should definitely read it.

—— Daron Acemoglu, co-author of Why Nations Fail

How Democracies Die by Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt is a useful primer on the importance of norms, institutional restraints and civic participation in maintaining a democracy - and how quickly those things can erode when we're not paying attention

—— President Barack Obama

With great energy and integrity [Levitsky and Ziblatt] apply their expertise to the current problems of the United States.

—— Timothy Snyder, author of On Tyranny

We owe the authors a debt of thanks for bringing their deep understanding to bear on the central political issue of the day.

—— Francis Fukuyama, author of Political Order and Political Decay

What's the worst thing to happen to US democracy recently? Most answers to that question start and end with Donald Trump. Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, though as horrified by Trump as anyone, try to take a wider view. This book looks to history to provide a guide for defending democratic norms when they are under threat, and finds that it is possible to fight back. Provocative and readable.

—— David Runciman , The Guardian

There are two must-read books about the Trump presidency at the moment. This is the one you probably haven't heard of. It is also the one that is most useful to British readers. Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt are anti-Donald Trump politics professors at Harvard. And the big advantage of political scientists over even the shrewdest and luckiest of eavesdropping journalists is that they have the training to give us a bigger picture.
They set out some rules about the slow, internal collapse of democracies, which are entirely relevant to Britain...

—— Andrew Marr , The Times

The greatest of the many merits of Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt's contribution to what will doubtless be the ballooning discipline of democracy death studies is their rejection of western exceptionalism. They tell inspiring stories I had not heard before...excellent, scholarly and readable, alarming and level-headed.

—— Nick Cohen , The Guardian

The political-science text in vogue this winter is How Democracies Die.

—— The New Yorker

[An] important new book.

—— Nicholas Kristof , New York Times

Levitsky and Ziblatt show how democracies have collapsed elsewhere-not just through violent coups, but more commonly (and insidiously) through a gradual slide into authoritarianism.... How Democracies Die is a lucid and essential guide to what can happen here.

—— New York Times

We're already awash in public indignation-what we desperately need is a sober, dispassionate look at the current state of affairs. Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, two of the most respected scholars in the field of democracy studies, offer just that.

—— The Washington Post

Grander, more didactic ambitions underpin "How Democracies Die" ... a more scholarly approach

—— The Economist

The most thought-provoking book comparing democratic crises in different nations

—— Adam Tooze , New York Review of Books

The most important book of the Trump era was not Bob Woodward's Fear or Michael Wolff's Fire and Fury or any of the other bestselling exposés of the White House circus. Arguably it was a wonkish tome by two Harvard political scientists, Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, published a year into Donald Trump's presidency and entitled How Democracies Die

—— The Economist

Schama writes with power and energy, and his patchwork of individual tales crosses the world.

—— Anthony Satting , The Observer

Extraordinary… From Britain to France, from America to the dark forests of central and eastern Europe, Schama’s scalpel-like wit and painterly descriptions provide a bravura panorama of the Jewish story

—— Jenni Frazer , Jewish Chronicle

It’s a riveting read, bursting with anecdote, colour and wit. Schama uses individual stories to highlight horror and suffering, but also to illustrate bravery, achievement and hope

—— Peter Frankopan , History Today

Few historians write with the energy of Simon Schama. His second volume on the history of the Jews shows that Schama has lost none of his vigour

—— David Abulafia , Standpoint

Simon Schama takes the reader through a grand sweep of Jewish history, but he makes it so personal you begin to feel you know the men and women whose lives shine out from the pages, and their foibles, and you get a sense of the fragility of their lives and their determination to survive. It's a brilliant piece of work

—— Julia Neuberger, Senior Rabbi, West London Synagogue

Schama's speciality is to take sometimes little-known historical figures and bring them dramatically to life. We are presented with a glittering cast of Jews from every century since the 15th ... Belonging shows Jews as prize-fighters and charlatans, theatre managers and physicians, writers, actors, painters, farmers and musicians. They are men and women of every sort, who leap off the pages as they struggle with what Schama has defined as the abiding challenge of Jewish life in the diaspora

—— Jewish Chronicle

Simon Schama’s epic tale of the Jewish people is full of rich, colourful stories that span centuries and continents and include massacres, miracles, discrimination and tolerance… Passionate

—— Life & Living

In the hands of a master colourist, this is history as a portrait gallery.

—— The Economist

It is an engaging and electrifying read by a skilled literary craftsman, cultural historian and tour guide.

—— Thane Rosenbaum , Guardian

Dazzling.

—— Daniel Beer , Guardian

Schama presents his material with the wit and panache of a novelist. The reader is treated to a dazzling parade of humanity in all its glory and shame. Every page sparkles with rich material and the range of learning is breathtaking. The story of Jewish survival – and sometimes even flourishing – against all the odds is utterly riveting.

—— Rev. Dr. John Harrod , Methodist Recorder

Simon Schama is the perfect companion for a time-travelling journey through Jewish history… A beguiling narrator.

—— David J. Wasserstein , The Tablet

These accounts make such fascinating reading that, through Schama’s extraordinary gift for storytelling, his book was difficult to put down.

—— Anthony Phillips , Church Times

What a visionary!... You must read it this summer, you’ll love it. It’s so incredible they published that a year before everything happened… He has a vision and it’s incredible… Incredible!

—— Carla Bruni , Quietus

The literary chronicler of Western decadence

—— Ross Douthat , New Statesman
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