About this item
Highlights
- Awards: Ron and Judy named San Francisco Library Laureates, 2019 Nominated for the Northern California Book Awards, General Nonfiction, 2019 Northern California Publishers and Authors, first prize, General Non-fiction, 2019 Non Fiction Authors Association, silver award, United States, Sociology, 2019 Royal Dragonfly Book Award first place Historical Nonfiction, 2019 Royal Dragonfly Book Award first place, Other Nonfiction, 2019 Book Excellence Awards (A Celebration of Global Literary Excellence) winner, Young Adult Nonfiction, 2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards semifinalist, Nelly Bly Award for Narrative Nonfiction, 2020 Award-Winning Finalist in the History: United States category of the 2020 International Book Awards----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Of the 918 Americans who died in the shocking murder-suicides of November 18, 1978, in the tiny South American country of Guyana, a third were under eighteen.
- Author(s): Judy Bebelaar & Ron Cabral
- 320 Pages
- History, United States
Description
Book Synopsis
Awards:
- Ron and Judy named San Francisco Library Laureates, 2019
- Nominated for the Northern California Book Awards, General Nonfiction, 2019
- Northern California Publishers and Authors, first prize, General Non-fiction, 2019
- Non Fiction Authors Association, silver award, United States, Sociology, 2019
- Royal Dragonfly Book Award first place Historical Nonfiction, 2019
- Royal Dragonfly Book Award first place, Other Nonfiction, 2019
- Book Excellence Awards (A Celebration of Global Literary Excellence) winner, Young Adult Nonfiction, 2020
- Chanticleer International Book Awards semifinalist, Nelly Bly Award for Narrative Nonfiction, 2020
- Award-Winning Finalist in the History: United States category of the 2020 International Book Awards
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Of the 918 Americans who died in the shocking murder-suicides of November 18, 1978, in the tiny South American country of Guyana, a third were under eighteen. More than half were in their twenties or younger. And Then They Were Gone: Teenagers of Peoples Temple from High School to Jonestown begins in San Francisco at the small school where Reverend Jim Jones enrolled the teens of his Peoples Temple church in 1976. Within a year, most had been sent to join Jones and other congregants in what Jones promised was a tropical paradise based on egalitarian values, but which turned out to be a deadly prison camp. Set against the turbulent backdrop of the late 1970s, And Then They Were Gone draws from interviews, books, and articles. Many of these powerful stories are told here for the first time.
And Then They Were Gone provides fresh information about the teen members of Peoples Temple, filling a vast gap in our overall understanding of Jim Jones and his (mostly) doomed followers. I'm grateful to the authors for these insights. - Jeff Guinn, author of The Road to Jonestown: Jim Jones and Peoples Temple.
Seen through the eyes of two of the Jonestown teens' high school teachers, this book is a work of love and fond memories. . . a testament to how youth and innocence can be hijacked. The dead cannot speak, yet Bebelaar and Cabral have allowed us to hear their voices once more. - Deborah Layton, author of Seductive Poison: A Jonestown Survivor's Story of Life and Death in the Peoples Temple
Review Quotes
This book humanizes such a horrific tragedy by inviting readers to become well acquainted with these teenagers-so many of whom were killed in the mass murder-suicide. Before they were victims of a crazed religious leader, they were just kids-with the hopes and dreams common to children everywhere. By reading about them, we honor their memories.
- Julia Scheeres, author of A Thousand Lives: The Untold Story of Hope, Deception, and Survival at Jonestown
Many people have forgotten about these Jonestown deaths and many others have never learned about them in the first place. This book is an antidote to that forgetfulness by putting a face on some of the victims. It teaches us how not to forget, but instead to bear witness to these interrupted lives. - from the Foreword by Herbert Kohl, educator and author