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Loading... Under The Banner Of Heavenby Jon Krakauer
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. If you enjoy crime, history, and religion as themes you'll find this book a great read. You'll learn quite a bit about the mormon mainline faith as well as its fundamentalist off-shoots and how these faiths have co-existed, not always peacefully, with America's more traditional forms of Christianity and its political authority. On another level, Krakauer attempts, to get you inside the heads of a couple of cold-blooded murderers who have cooly rationalized their dreadful crimes as god's calling. However he tries, and he himself is confounded, you'll never quite grasp the minds of these criminals, relate to them, or even sympathize with them the way you might the characters Truman Capote portrays in his historical novel, In Cold Blood. Even now, 25 years later, the criminal justice system is trying to figure out if they are schizophrenic and therefore should be spared a death sentence. Perhaps the faith that fuels blood letting will never be truly understood. ( )I have to keep buying copies of this book because I keep giving mine away in my zeal to get people to read it. Wholesalers, call me. I have to keep buying copies of this book because I keep giving mine away in my zeal to get people to read it. Wholesalers, call me. I have to keep buying copies of this book because I keep giving mine away in my zeal to get people to read it. Wholesalers, call me. I was somewhat disappointed in this book but I'm not sure it was the author's fault or my own misplaced expectations. I expected the book to read with the adventurous, intrigue that "Into the Wild" had but with a true to life murder mystery. As I read, I felt the history of the Mormon church kept bogging down the story of the murders and kept wishing he would stick to the present until I realized that the author was trying to build a case as to why perhaps the murders had occurred and that perhaps the murderous and lawless past of some prominent members had much to contribute to the mentality of the murderers in the present day situation. A friend asked me if the church would take this as a book that it felt was against them and I said most emphatically yes. And, sure enough, at the end there is a section the author gives room to a member to respond. But, oddly, in the summarizing chapter, parts of which would have been better placed at the beginning so that the reader had a better understanding of where the author was going with the story, the author seems to have a sympathetic view of the religion. Either way, it was quite enlightening and a bit scary even.
His project is ambitious: With Mormon fundamentalism as his chief illustration, he seeks to understand why religious extremism flourishes in a skeptical, postmodern society. . . . The result is a book that is both insightful and flawed.
References to this work on external resources.
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Criticism of the Book of Mormon Criticism of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Criticism of the Latter Day Saint movement | List of publications critical of the Latter Day Saint movement |
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:51 -0400)
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