Don't Call It a Cult : The Shocking Story of Keith Raniere and the Women of NXI…

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Gut: Buch, das gelesen wurde, sich aber in einem guten Zustand befindet. Der Einband weist nur sehr ...
ISBN
9781586422752
Kategorie

Über dieses Produkt

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Steerforth Press
ISBN-10
1586422758
ISBN-13
9781586422752
eBay Product ID (ePID)
21050388024

Product Key Features

Book Title
Don't Call It a Cult : the Shocking Story of Keith Raniere and the Women of Nxivm
Number of Pages
336 Pages
Language
English
Publication Year
2021
Topic
Criminals & Outlaws, Cults
Illustrator
Yes
Genre
Religion, Biography & Autobiography
Author
Sarah Berman
Format
Trade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height
0.9 in
Item Weight
14.4 Oz
Item Length
9 in
Item Width
6 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2021-286458
Dewey Edition
23
Reviews
"...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review) "This is a very thought provoking book about a subject that many may have glanced at the headlines and not known much about. From empowerment to manipulation, it should serve as a warning to be careful about how you trust and with how much." -- The Parkersburg News & Sentinel "A new book reveals the shocking ways that "self-help guru" Keith Raniere trapped women into his sick scheme." --Eric Spitznagel, The New York Post "An absolute work of art" --Vancouver is Awesome, "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review) "This is a very thought provoking book about a subject that many may have glanced at the headlines and not known much about. From empowerment to manipulation, it should serve as a warning to be careful about how you trust and with how much." -- The Parkersburg News & Sentinel "A new book reveals the shocking ways that "self-help guru" Keith Raniere trapped women into his sick scheme." --Eric Spitznagel, The New York Post "An absolute work of art" --Vancouver is Awesome "This true crime is for readers of stories about cults and anyone looking for a deep dive into the recent news stories regarding NXIVM" --Bookriot, "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist " Don't Call It A Cult is the most detailed, well-reported, and nuanced look at NXIVM's history, its supporters, and those left destroyed in its wake. If you want to understand NXIVM--and other groups like it--reading Sarah Berman's account is essential." -- Scaachi Koul , bestselling author of One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter "Sarah Berman is absolutely fearless in Don't Call It a Cult . Her determination to not only tell the difficult, often disturbing story of NXIVM, but tell it right, shines through in every aspect of this gripping book. I simply could not put it down." --Alicia Elliott, A Mind Spread Out on the Ground "Berman has crafted a tour-de-force and powerful homage to first-person reportage. A riveting page-turner, Don't Call It a Cult is a must-read for anyone who is fascinated by the long term effects of cult culture, abuse, and pseudoscience." --Lindsay Wong, author of The Woo-Woo "Sarah Berman's reporting on the inner workings of NXIVM and its secret, coercive 'women's group' fully elucidates how scores of incredibly talented, smart young women fell under the spell of a mousy, volleyball-playing con man. Don't Call It a Cult is an incisive, empathetic page-turner." --A ndrea bennett, author of Like a Boy But Not a Boy " Don't Call It A Cult is a thorough and compelling examination of a terrifying organization. Berman understands and brilliantly conveys the complexity of abuse, assault, and the lasting effects of each, and delivers a book that says as much about human nature as it does about NXIVM. Required reading!" -- Anne T. Donahue, author of Nobody Cares "Don't Call It a Cult explains Raniere's dark charisma and why so many people were attracted to NXIVM and stayed on, even as the manipulation, exploitation, and abuse got extreme. A thoughtful, deeply reported take on a sensational story, one that I won't soon forget." -- Rachel Monroe, author of Savage Appetites "Berman lays bare this longest of cons: lost souls and ambitious young people drawn into NXIVM's vortex of sexual assault, child exploitation, fraud, manipulation, and blackmail. This too-crazy-for-fiction tale is expertly spooled out with journalistic precision and a screenwriter's sense of scene and story. I couldn't put it down." --Lorimer Shenher, author of That Lonely Section of Hell and This One Looks Like a Boy, "...Sarah Berman's Don't Call It a Cult is a thoroughly reported work that details a staggering amount of relevant information the TV series left out." -- The Atlantic "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review) "This is a very thought provoking book about a subject that many may have glanced at the headlines and not known much about. From empowerment to manipulation, it should serve as a warning to be careful about how you trust and with how much." -- The Parkersburg News & Sentinel "A new book reveals the shocking ways that "self-help guru" Keith Raniere trapped women into his sick scheme." --Eric Spitznagel, The New York Post "An absolute work of art" --Vancouver is Awesome "This true crime is for readers of stories about cults and anyone looking for a deep dive into the recent news stories regarding NXIVM" --Bookriot "Both captivating and frightening, Don't Call it a Cult will astonish most readers." --New York Journal of Books "Vancouver investigative reporter Sarah Berman's nonfiction account, "Don't Call it a Cult," goes deep into the organization, meticulously tracing how it began and how it grew." --Laurie Hertzel, Minneapolis Star Tribune, "...Sarah Berman's Don't Call It a Cult is a thoroughly reported work that details a staggering amount of relevant information the TV series left out."-- The Atlantic "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review) "This is a very thought provoking book about a subject that many may have glanced at the headlines and not known much about. From empowerment to manipulation, it should serve as a warning to be careful about how you trust and with how much." -- The Parkersburg News & Sentinel "A new book reveals the shocking ways that "self-help guru" Keith Raniere trapped women into his sick scheme." --Eric Spitznagel, The New York Post "An absolute work of art" --Vancouver is Awesome "This true crime is for readers of stories about cults and anyone looking for a deep dive into the recent news stories regarding NXIVM" --Bookriot, "...Sarah Berman's Don't Call It a Cult is a thoroughly reported work that details a staggering amount of relevant information the TV series left out." -- The Atlantic "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review) "This is a very thought provoking book about a subject that many may have glanced at the headlines and not known much about. From empowerment to manipulation, it should serve as a warning to be careful about how you trust and with how much." -- The Parkersburg News & Sentinel "A new book reveals the shocking ways that "self-help guru" Keith Raniere trapped women into his sick scheme." --Eric Spitznagel, The New York Post "An absolute work of art" --Vancouver is Awesome "This true crime is for readers of stories about cults and anyone looking for a deep dive into the recent news stories regarding NXIVM" --Bookriot "Both captivating and frightening, Don't Call it a Cult will astonish most readers." --New York Journal of Books, "...Sarah Berman's Don't Call It a Cult is a thoroughly reported work that details a staggering amount of relevant information the TV series left out."-- The Atlantic "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review) "This is a very thought provoking book about a subject that many may have glanced at the headlines and not known much about. From empowerment to manipulation, it should serve as a warning to be careful about how you trust and with how much." -- The Parkersburg News & Sentinel "A new book reveals the shocking ways that "self-help guru" Keith Raniere trapped women into his sick scheme." --Eric Spitznagel, The New York Post "An absolute work of art" --Vancouver is Awesome "This true crime is for readers of stories about cults and anyone looking for a deep dive into the recent news stories regarding NXIVM" --Bookriot "Both captivating and frightening, Don't Call it a Cult will astonish most readers." --New York Journal of Books, *One of Oxygen.com's best crime books of 2021.* "...Sarah Berman's Don't Call It a Cult is a thoroughly reported work that details a staggering amount of relevant information the TV series left out." -- The Atlantic "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review) "This is a very thought provoking book about a subject that many may have glanced at the headlines and not known much about. From empowerment to manipulation, it should serve as a warning to be careful about how you trust and with how much." --The Parkersburg News & Sentinel "A new book reveals the shocking ways that "self-help guru" Keith Raniere trapped women into his sick scheme." --Eric Spitznagel, The New York Post "An absolute work of art" --Vancouver is Awesome "This true crime is for readers of stories about cults and anyone looking for a deep dive into the recent news stories regarding NXIVM" --Bookriot "Both captivating and frightening, Don't Call it a Cult will astonish most readers." --New York Journal of Books "Vancouver investigative reporter Sarah Berman's nonfiction account, "Don't Call it a Cult," goes deep into the organization, meticulously tracing how it began and how it grew." --Laurie Hertzel, Minneapolis Star Tribune, *One of Oxygen.com's best crime books of 2021.* "...Sarah Berman's Don't Call It a Cult is a thoroughly reported work that details a staggering amount of relevant information the TV series left out." -- The Atlantic "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review) "This is a very thought provoking book about a subject that many may have glanced at the headlines and not known much about. From empowerment to manipulation, it should serve as a warning to be careful about how you trust and with how much." -- The Parkersburg News & Sentinel "A new book reveals the shocking ways that "self-help guru" Keith Raniere trapped women into his sick scheme." --Eric Spitznagel, The New York Post "An absolute work of art" --Vancouver is Awesome "This true crime is for readers of stories about cults and anyone looking for a deep dive into the recent news stories regarding NXIVM" --Bookriot "Both captivating and frightening, Don't Call it a Cult will astonish most readers." --New York Journal of Books "Vancouver investigative reporter Sarah Berman's nonfiction account, "Don't Call it a Cult," goes deep into the organization, meticulously tracing how it began and how it grew." --Laurie Hertzel, Minneapolis Star Tribune, "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist, "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review) "This is a very thought provoking book about a subject that many may have glanced at the headlines and not known much about. From empowerment to manipulation, it should serve as a warning to be careful about how you trust and with how much." -- The Parkersburg News & Sentinel "A new book reveals the shocking ways that "self-help guru" Keith Raniere trapped women into his sick scheme." --Eric Spitznagel, The New York Post, "Berman lays bare this longest of cons; a dizzying array of lost souls and ambitious young people drawn into NXIVM's promising vortex, only to become caught up in a deeply disturbing eat-or-be-eaten international cult of mind control, sexual assault, child exploitation, fraud, manipulation, and blackmail. From an undocumented Mexican minor to the trust fund children of a Canadian liquor baron to several rising young actors in Vancouver's television production community, Berman expertly spools out this too-crazy-for-fiction tale with journalistic precision and a screenwriter's sense of scene and story. I couldn't put it down."" -- Lorimer Shenher, author of This One Looks Like a Boy "Sarah Berman's reporting on the inner workings of NXIVM and its secret, coercive "women's group," DOS, fully elucidates how scores of incredibly talented, smart young women fell under the spell of a mousey, volleyball-playing con man. Don't Call It a Cult is an incisive, empathetic page-turner." -- andrea bennett, author of Like a Boy but Not a Boy " Don't Call It A Cult is a thorough and compelling examination of a terrifying organization. Berman understands and brilliantly conveys the complexity of abuse, assault, and the lasting effects of each, and delivers a book that says as much about human nature as it does about NXIVM. Required reading!" -- Anne T. Donahue, author of Nobody Cares " Don't Call It a Cult explains Raniere's dark charisma and why so many people were attracted to NXIVM and stayed on, even as the manipulation, exploitation, and abuse got extreme. A thoughtful, deeply reported take on a sensational story, one that I won't soon forget." -- Rachel Monroe, author of Savage Appetites " Don't Call It A Cult is both a tour-de-force and powerful homage to first-person reportage. With journalistic brilliance, Berman has crafted a riveting page-turner on the history of NXIVM, profiling its founder Keith Raniere and several of the cult's high-ranking female members. Berman is a skilled writer and highly perceptive reporter; she fearlessly probes her subjects. She is not afraid to ask hard-hitting questions, researching first-hand the terrifying conditioning that NXIVM once offered members in the guise of self-help. Deeply researched and viscerally felt: this book is a must-read for anyone who is fascinated by the long term effects of cult culture, abuse, and pseudoscience." -- Lindsay Wong, author of The Woo-Woo: How I Survived Ice Hockey, Drug Raids, Demons, and My Crazy Chinese Family, "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." -- Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist, "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist " Don't Call It A Cult is the most detailed, well-reported, and nuanced look at NXIVM's history, its supporters, and those left destroyed in its wake. If you want to understand NXIVM--and other groups like it--reading Sarah Berman's account is essential." -- Scaachi Koul , bestselling author of One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter "Sarah Berman is absolutely fearless in Don't Call It a Cult . Her determination to not only tell the difficult, often disturbing story of NXIVM, but tell it right, shines through in every aspect of this gripping book. I simply could not put it down." --Alicia Elliott, A Mind Spread Out on the Ground "Berman has crafted a tour-de-force and powerful homage to first-person reportage. A riveting page-turner, Don't Call It a Cult is a must-read for anyone who is fascinated by the long term effects of cult culture, abuse, and pseudoscience." --Lindsay Wong, author of The Woo-Woo "Sarah Berman's reporting on the inner workings of NXIVM and its secret, coercive 'women's group' fully elucidates how scores of incredibly talented, smart young women fell under the spell of a mousy, volleyball-playing con man. Don't Call It a Cult is an incisive, empathetic page-turner." --a ndrea bennett, author of Like a Boy But Not a Boy " Don't Call It A Cult is a thorough and compelling examination of a terrifying organization. Berman understands and brilliantly conveys the complexity of abuse, assault, and the lasting effects of each, and delivers a book that says as much about human nature as it does about NXIVM. Required reading!" -- Anne T. Donahue, author of Nobody Cares "Don't Call It a Cult explains Raniere's dark charisma and why so many people were attracted to NXIVM and stayed on, even as the manipulation, exploitation, and abuse got extreme. A thoughtful, deeply reported take on a sensational story, one that I won't soon forget." -- Rachel Monroe, author of Savage Appetites "Berman lays bare this longest of cons: lost souls and ambitious young people drawn into NXIVM's vortex of sexual assault, child exploitation, fraud, manipulation, and blackmail. This too-crazy-for-fiction tale is expertly spooled out with journalistic precision and a screenwriter's sense of scene and story. I couldn't put it down." --Lorimer Shenher, author of That Lonely Section of Hell and This One Looks Like a Boy, " Don't Call It A Cult is the most detailed, well-reported, and nuanced look at NXIVM's history, its supporters, and those left destroyed in its wake. If you want to understand NXIVM--and other groups like it--reading Sarah Berman's account is essential." -- Scaachi Koul , bestselling author of One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter "Sarah Berman is absolutely fearless in Don't Call It a Cult . Her determination to not only tell the difficult, often disturbing story of NXIVM, but tell it right, shines through in every aspect of this gripping book. I simply could not put it down." --Alicia Elliott, A Mind Spread Out on the Ground "Berman has crafted a tour-de-force and powerful homage to first-person reportage. A riveting page-turner, Don't Call It a Cult is a must-read for anyone who is fascinated by the long term effects of cult culture, abuse, and pseudoscience." --Lindsay Wong, author of The Woo-Woo "Sarah Berman's reporting on the inner workings of NXIVM and its secret, coercive 'women's group' fully elucidates how scores of incredibly talented, smart young women fell under the spell of a mousy, volleyball-playing con man. Don't Call It a Cult is an incisive, empathetic page-turner." --A ndrea bennett, author of Like a Boy But Not a Boy " Don't Call It A Cult is a thorough and compelling examination of a terrifying organization. Berman understands and brilliantly conveys the complexity of abuse, assault, and the lasting effects of each, and delivers a book that says as much about human nature as it does about NXIVM. Required reading!" -- Anne T. Donahue, author of Nobody Cares "Don't Call It a Cult explains Raniere's dark charisma and why so many people were attracted to NXIVM and stayed on, even as the manipulation, exploitation, and abuse got extreme. A thoughtful, deeply reported take on a sensational story, one that I won't soon forget." -- Rachel Monroe, author of Savage Appetites "Berman lays bare this longest of cons: lost souls and ambitious young people drawn into NXIVM's vortex of sexual assault, child exploitation, fraud, manipulation, and blackmail. This too-crazy-for-fiction tale is expertly spooled out with journalistic precision and a screenwriter's sense of scene and story. I couldn't put it down." --Lorimer Shenher, author of That Lonely Section of Hell and This One Looks Like a Boy, "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist "Journalist Sarah Berman brings her signature gimlet eye and impeccable reporting to the story of the NXIVM women in Don't Call It a Cult, a chilling true crime account...Don't Call It a Cult is the nightmarish, unflinching true story of the women who survived NXIVM--and the women who didn't." -- Foreword Reviews (starred review), "...investigative journalist Berman front-loads her startling, comprehensive exposé on the NXIVM group with key information on how the association became popular yet remained elusive to law enforcement...the author's engrossing reportage meticulously reveals the tumultuous rise and fall of NXIVM after numerous criminal indictments and prosecutions...File this alongside Lawrence Wright's Going Clear and Jeff Guinn's The Road to Jonestown ...An incendiary, serpentine report on criminal manipulation of staggering proportions." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Investigative journalist Berman debuts with the definitive look at the NXIVM cult, which victimized dozens of women for more than a decade ... This deep dive behind the headlines isn't to be missed." -- Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) "Berman demonstrates the tactics cults use to manipulate and control without casting judgment or blame on the victims. Truly gripping, this is the definitive book on NXIVM." -- Booklist " Don't Call It A Cult is the most detailed, well-reported, and nuanced look at NXIVM's history, its supporters, and those left destroyed in its wake. If you want to understand NXIVM--and other groups like it--reading Sarah Berman's account is essential." -- Scaachi Koul , bestselling author of One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter "Sarah Berman is absolutely fearless in Don't Call It a Cult . Her determination to not only tell the difficult, often disturbing story of NXIVM, but tell it right, shines through in every aspect of this gripping book. I simply could not put it down." --Alicia Elliott, A Mind Spread Out on the Ground "Berman has crafted a tour-de-force and powerful homage to first-person reportage. A riveting page-turner, Don't Call It a Cult is a must-read for anyone who is fascinated by the long term effects of cult culture, abuse, and pseudoscience." --Lindsay Wong, author of The Woo-Woo "Sarah Berman's reporting on the inner workings of NXIVM and its secret, coercive 'women's group' fully elucidates how scores of incredibly talented, smart young women fell under the spell of a mousy, volleyball-playing con man. Don't Call It a Cult is an incisive, empathetic page-turner." --a ndrea bennett, author of Like a Boy But Not a Boy " Don't Call It A Cult is a thorough and compelling examination of a terrifying organization. Berman understands and brilliantly conveys the complexity of abuse, assault, and the lasting effects of each, and delivers a book that says as much about human nature as it does about NXIVM. Required reading!" -- Anne T. Donahue, author of Nobody Cares "Don't Call It a Cult explains Raniere's dark charisma and why so many people were attracted to NXIVM and stayed on, even as the manipulation, exploitation, and abuse got extreme. A thoughtful, deeply reported take on a sensational story, one that I won't soon forget." -- Rachel Monroe, author of Savage Appetites "Berman lays bare this longest of cons: lost souls and ambitious young people drawn into NXIVM's vortex of sexual assault, child exploitation, fraud, manipulation, and blackmail. This too-crazy-for-fiction tale is expertly spooled out with journalistic precision and a screenwriter's sense of scene and story. I couldn't put it down." --Lorimer Shenher, author of That Lonely Section of Hell and This One Looks Like a Boy
Dewey Decimal
361.4/30974743
Table Of Content
Cast of Characters Prologue: "The Most Ethical Man" PART 1: THEORY OF EVERYTHING 1 - Secret Sisterhood 2 - One in Ten Million 3 - Mothership, New York 4 - "Money Spilling into Your Wallet" 5 - When Keith Met Nancy (and Lauren) 6 - Albany Shrugged 7 - The Girls 8 - Us vs. Them 9 - Sunk Costs PART 2: SOME VERY POWERFUL HUMAN BEINGS 10 - Mission in Mexico 11 - The Heist 12 - What the Bleep 13 - "Cracked Open" 14 - An Ethical Breach 15 - Golden Boy 16 - His Holiness 17 - Spy Games 18 - Room PART 3: A PLACE OF SURVIVAL 19 - The Act 20 - Slave Number One 21 - The Call 22 - The Vow 23 - "This Is Not the Army" 24 - "Master, Please Brand Me" 25 - Reckoning 26 - "Me Too" 27 - In Character Epilogue: Vanguard on Trial Appendix: Letter to Raniere
Synopsis
As seen in Season Two of the HBO docuseries THE VOW They draw you in with the promise of empowerment, self-discovery, women helping women. The more secretive those connections are, the more exclusive you feel. Little did you know, you just joined a cult. Sex trafficking. Self-help coaching. Forced labor. Mentorship. Multi-level marketing. Gaslighting. Investigative journalist Sarah Berman explores the shocking practices of NXIVM, a cult run by Keith Raniere and many enablers. Through the accounts of central NXIVM figures, Berman uncovers how dozens of women seeking creative coaching and networking opportunities instead were blackmailed, literally branded, near-starved, and enslaved. Don't Call It a Cult is a riveting account of NXIVM's rise to power, its ability to evade prosecution for decades, and the investigation that finally revealed its dark secrets to the world.
LC Classification Number
HV547.B47 2021

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