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Reclaiming My Decade Lost in Scientology
- Narrated by: Sands Hall
- Length: 12 hrs and 24 mins
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Publisher's Summary
In this audiobook, Sands Hall chronicles her slow yet willing absorption into the Church of Scientology. Her time in the Church, the 1980s, includes the secretive illness and death of its founder, L. Ron Hubbard, and the ascension of David Miscavige. Hall compellingly reveals what drew her into the religion - what she found intriguing and useful - and how she came to confront its darker sides.
As a young woman from a literary family striving to forge her own way as an artist, Hall ricochets between the worlds of Shakespeare, avant-garde theater, and soap opera, until her brilliant elder brother, playwright Oakley Hall III, falls from a bridge and suffers permanent brain damage. In the secluded canyons of Hollywood, she finds herself increasingly drawn toward the certainty that Scientology appears to offer.
In this candid and nuanced memoir, Hall recounts her spiritual and artistic journey with a visceral affection for language, delighting in the way words can create a shared world. However, as Hall begins to grasp how purposefully Hubbard has created the unique language of Scientology - in the process isolating and indoctrinating its practitioners - she confronts how language can also be used as a tool of authoritarianism.
Hall is a captivating guide, and this audiobook explores how she has found meaning and purpose within that decade that for so long she thought of as lost; how she has faced the "flunk" represented by those years, and has embraced a way to "start" anew.
What listeners say about Reclaiming My Decade Lost in Scientology
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Roberta W
- 2023-02-20
Perhaps mis-titled
I haven’t read any other biographies about people getting out of Scientology, so don’t have anything to to compare it to, but it feels mis-titled. The book was as much about the author’s reluctant and skeptical entry into the cult as it was about her decision to leave it. Ultimately I actually found that interesting, as I find it hard to fathom how people get wrapped up in these things. I’ve seen other reviews disliking how long her personal story was, but it’s a memoir so it comes with the territory. The stuff around her brother was sad, but I’m glad she made peace with who he had become. An ok book.
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- Amazon Customer
- 2022-04-18
A deeply personal, eloquent, and frank account.
When an author reads their own works it makes the connection to the reader far more personal and emotive. This reflection on a life leading up to and through scientology is honest and sometimes frustrating and painful to listen to. You can hear the author looking back and wanting to shake her younger self out of a stupor, poor decisions, and seemingly wasted years. Though she is still able to find meaning and perspective and is kind to her younger self for being young and hopeful and ... stuck. As I'm sure we can all relate to sincerely.
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- Kai
- 2022-12-24
It’s ok
Not the best book out there about Scientology the cult. The author spent a lot of the book being wishy washy about her relationship. That would have been ok if what was being talked about was interesting. But it wasn’t. Author went literally into sing song many times throughout the book which I don’t personally think added anything to the book and just got annoying. The author didn’t get that far into Scientology and maybe that’s why the book lacked quality compared to other x-Scientology books. The book is on the side of bland, boring, and although I think the author wanted the book to serve as a warning to people, how could it when there was nothing really deterring shared in the book. This is probably why the book is available free to listen to for members.
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- J Brandon.
- 2022-06-26
Meh. Not for me.
I actually almost made it to the end of this. It was mildly interested to follow this person blundering along. As we all do in our own ways of course. Still- not for me. This basically seems like a person with almost no life, grasping at straws trying to find someone to hand her some coded answer to ‘the meaning of it all’. Yawn.
Spoiler alert - despite the titillating promise of the title - nothing happens. Or at least nothing happened in the first 7 hours. Maybe I missed it. Oh well.
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