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The Long Prison Journey of Leslie van Houten

Life Beyond the Cult

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
At the age off twenty-one, Leslie Van Houten was sentenced to death, along with Charles Manson and his other disciples, for the infamous murder rampage spanning two nights in August 1969. Leslie, who was present at the Rosemary and Leno LaBianca stabbings, serenely accepted her sentence, wishing only that she had better served Manson in carrying out his apocalyptic vision of "Helter Skelter." When the United States temporarily suspended its death penalty, her sentence for murder conspiracy was converted to life in prison. Today, at the age of 51, after three trials and with no parole in sight, Leslie has become a remarkable survivor of a living nightmare.
This work presents the first in-depth look at how this "girl-next-door" became one of Manson's "girls." It also tells about Karlene Faith's thirty-year friendship with Leslie, whom she met while teaching in prison. To everyone who encountered Leslie - including prison staff and television journalists - she was not the demon typically portrayed by the media, but rather a gentle, generous spirit who mourned her victims. But why didn't this intelligent young woman see the evil in the "messiah" who had sexually exploited her, preached a racist ideology, and ordered her to murder? Faith pieces together the puzzle, starting with Leslie's spiritual quest within the sixties counterculture and her immediate attraction to Manson during a chance meeting. We learn of Manson's ability to look into her mind and commiserate with her turmoil. We also see his own need to control women and how his brainwashing techniques enabled his followers to embrace him as God, giving them little choice but to obey.
Leslie's journey out of Manson's grasp is a riveting feminist and spiritual story of recovering one's self. Why this rehabilitated woman, long punished for one man's madness, has not been able to leave prison is another story Faith brings to light. Filled with accounts of political injustices, this powerful book moves the reader to rethink the meanings and limits of guilt and punishment.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 28, 2001
      Faith offers an intelligent argument on behalf of Leslie Van Houten, arguably the least culpable and most rehabilitated of the infamous "Manson girls." A Canadian criminology professor, Faith (Simon Fraser Univ.) has visited and corresponded with Van Houten since 1972, when Faith was teaching at the institution where Van Houten was imprisoned. She felt drawn to the three Manson women, whose death sentences were commuted that year, yet who were kept in isolation until the late 1970s. Faith acknowledges the particular revulsion directed toward the associates of Manson, but asserts that these women were "victims of a tortured boy who became a murderous, controlling man... with a penchant for seducing and exploiting trusting, vulnerable young women." Faith crisply summarizes Van Houten's descent from a promising middle-class young woman into a drug- and sex-crazed member of Manson's Family; her peripheral, panicked involvement in the murder of Rosemary LaBianca on the second night of Manson-ordered mayhem in August 1969 is also detailed. Faith notes that as Van Houten began to withdraw her loyalty to Manson, she became severely anorexic. In her narrative, Faith evokes the vanished world of hippie idealism that became twisted into Manson's poisonous ideology, and writes persuasively about collisions between gender, countercultural extremes and the criminal justice system. However, her reliance on psychological explanations of the Family's rituals and crimes, and her clear editorial eagerness to absolve the Manson women, may leave some readers unmoved by her argument that it is time for Van Houten to be paroled. (June 25)Forecast:Faith's book will appeal to readers of sociology, criminal justice and women's studies. Since it is a serious look at a former member of the Manson Family, the publisher is pitching NPR for radio coverage and has announced an aggressive first printing of 5,000 copies.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 7, 2001
      Faith offers an intelligent argument on behalf of Leslie Van Houten, arguably the least culpable and most rehabilitated of the infamous "Manson girls." A Canadian criminology professor, Faith (Simon Fraser Univ.) has visited and corresponded with Van Houten since 1972, when Faith was teaching at the institution where Van Houten was imprisoned. She felt drawn to the three Manson women, whose death sentences were commuted that year, yet who were kept in isolation until the late 1970s. Faith acknowledges the particular revulsion directed toward the associates of Manson, but asserts that these women were "victims of a tortured boy who became a murderous, controlling man... with a penchant for seducing and exploiting trusting, vulnerable young women." Faith crisply summarizes Van Houten's descent from a promising middle-class young woman into a drug- and sex-crazed member of Manson's Family; her peripheral, panicked involvement in the murder of Rosemary LaBianca on the second night of Manson-ordered mayhem in August 1969 is also detailed. Faith notes that as Van Houten began to withdraw her loyalty to Manson, she became severely anorexic. In her narrative, Faith evokes the vanished world of hippie idealism that became twisted into Manson's poisonous ideology, and writes persuasively about collisions between gender, countercultural extremes and the criminal justice system. However, her reliance on psychological explanations of the Family's rituals and crimes, and her clear editorial eagerness to absolve the Manson women, may leave some readers unmoved by her argument that it is time for Van Houten to be paroled. (June 25) Forecast: Faith's book will appeal to readers of sociology, criminal justice and women's studies. Since it is a serious look at a former member of the Manson Family, the publisher is pitching NPR for radio coverage and has announced an aggressive first printing of 5,000 copies.

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