Manson: The Life and Times of Charles Manson
The New York Times bestselling, authoritative account of the life of Charles Manson, filled with surprising new information and previously unpublished photographs: "A riveting, almost Dickensian narrative...four stars" (People).More than forty years ago Charles Manson and his mostly female commune killed nine people, among them the pregnant actress Sharon Tate. It was the culmination of a criminal career that author Jeff Guinn traces back to Manson's childhood. Guinn interviewed Manson's sister and cousin, neither of whom had ever previously cooperated with an author. Childhood friends, cellmates, and even some members of the Manson family have provided new information about Manson's life. Guinn has made discoveries about the night of the Tate murders, answering unresolved questions, such as why one person near the scene of the crime was spared. Manson puts the killer in the context of the turbulent late sixties, an era of race riots and street protests when authority in all its forms was under siege. Guinn shows us how Manson created and refined his message to fit the times, persuading confused young women (and a few men) that he had the solutions to their problems. At the same time he used them to pursue his long-standing musical ambitions. His frustrated ambitions, combined with his bizarre race-war obsession, would have lethal consequences. Guinn's book is a "tour de force of a biography...Manson stands as a definitive work: important for students of criminology, human behavior, popular culture, music, psychopathology, and sociopathology...and compulsively readable" (Ann Rule, The New York Times Book Review).
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Community Reviews
This wasn't a biography just about Charles Manson, no. This is American history literature. It picks at the social constructs and deconstructions from the 1920s until the mid-1970s. The country's race wars, the hippie conmmunes, and money hungry gurus and religious zealots. The rise and fall of the sunny surf Beach Boys. This was a biopic of how a single man knowingly used his rather genius brain with the backing of words from Dale Carnegie and knowledge of the Scientology "religion", and his personal fears against those that needed much of society's help in their youth. If you couldn't or no longer could benefit "the cause," you were disposable. I see how Charlie did it, but my question becomes how were these young people so inthrwalled with this man; his word was never his bond; they ate from dumpsters. They were convinced he was the second coming of Christ. Acid is one hell of a drug. This book details not only the perpetrators and prior possible suspects but the victims as well as pretty much anyone who had contact with Manson. And everyone Charles Manson met and had a connection with was left traumatized or their life destroyed. He certainly did "win friends and influence people," but his grasp for musical fame and his self-righteousness got the best of him. In the end, Charles Manson got what he always wanted; to be bigger than The Beatles.
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