AGREKA BOOKS •   Home  About Us  Book List  Precious Pets  Historical Society Books  Art Dept
 

 

John R. Llewellyn has appeared on  Larry King Live, ABC Primetime, The Today Show with Matt Lauer & Katie Couric; NBC Nightly News with Tom Brokaw; Fox News Channel's "The Edge" with Paula Zahn; MSNBC; Inside Edition; Good Morning America, & is contacted frequently by local and foreign press. 

 
  A TEENAGER'S TEARS – When Parents Convert To Polygamy                     
  
Choose where to buy online
 

Amazon US   ChangingHands.com  BarnesNoble.com 

   Amazon UK    Amazon CA              Email This Page To a Friend
             

    You may also order this book through your local book store with the ISBN number. 

Click cover for larger image
      

By John R. Llewellyn        Read 1st Chapter & Excerpts       
  List Price $14.95
  Copyright - Feb 2001  Soft Cover 5.5 x 8.5 144p 
  Agreka™ Books ISBN 188810659X Library of Congress 00-108807

  Introduction    Preface   
About John Llewellyn

Numbers of people are entering polygamy today. Travel that world through a modern day family who leaves traditional Mormonism and enters polygamy, the father excited, the mother and teenagers deeply troubled. Meet the adult and teenage cliques of the governing "elite" families, the "second-class" families, the "obedient" women who believe they must be subservient in every way, and finally the strong-willed women who use their intrinsic powers to develop a life of freedom and choice within the group. Meet the men and their different uses of religious power over the women whose lives they control—and those they only think they control.
    In the end will these teenagers and their mother give up the "good life" they have created—and their very freedom?

Laura Chapman, who grew up in the Colorado City Polygamist Group as the 25th child of 31 children, has been featured on CBS/48Hours, ABC 20/20, and in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and in London newspapers. Believing education critical to understanding life and with double degrees in Sociology and Human Development, and a minor in Psychology, Mrs. Chapman is deeply concerned with the Colorado City group forcing all their children to withdraw from public schools.
   
"Llewellyn accomplishes the incredible task of exposing the many diverse dynamics of Utah polygamist groups and their members in A Teenager's Tears. The characters of the women, children, men and self-proclaimed apostles are both astounding and precise. The display of male privilege, abuse of power in leadership, and struggles within families, is triumphantly accurate. The "feminists" within the groups, however, are still captured in the basic belief that without a man there is no heavenly glory in the hereafter."

Rena Mackert, formerly of the Colorado City Polygamist Group, appeared on A & E’s "Inside Polygamy" documentary
    Mr. Llewellyn has effectively presented the fears of a young girl entering a lifestyle she does not understand. An excellent representation of what women face in sharing their husband with other women. Hats off to Mr. LLewellyn for courageously presenting the issue of pedophile behavior so rampant in these cults, and the lack of action taken against the perpetrators by polygamist leaders."

Rowena Erickson, a founding member of Tapestry Against Polygamy and a former polygamist wife, was quoted in a Salt Lake Tribune article, Mar.8, 2000, about his first book Murder of a Prophet, "I kept looking at the women and the girls he writes about and how real they are. He knows the life."

Greg Burton, who wrote the Tribune article, stated: " Llewellyn is everything he purports to be and more. . . ."  

With a law enforcement investigator’s trained and objective eye, Llewellyn explores the positives and the negatives of this lifestyle. As a Mormon he came to believe the doctrine of plural marriage, entered polygamy as an adult, lived the life for many years, and then chose to leave because of corruption among the priesthood leadership. As additional research, he interviewed many people: men and women still in polygamy, women who have left, and teenagers who had the option to leave, and did.  

   Top

Preface

The publication of Murder of a Prophet, The Dark Side of Utah Polygamy outraged the Mormon fundamentalist subculture. Utah polygamists feared the book portrayed all polygamist men as exploiters, potential murderers, and female abusers. In the cities of Colorado City and Hildale the book was banned. In direct opposition to this book, three matriarchs in the polygamist subculture decided to publish a book of their own that showed the positive side of polygamy. They circulated a proposal to several hundred polygamist women explaining their objective and asked them to contribute anecdotes showing the positive side of polygamy to counter, they said, what had been written about the "occasional" bad side. The contributors were told their names would be kept confidential.
    I personally know two of the women, both are intelligent and outstanding writers. As women and mothers, I rank them among the best, and as representatives of plural marriage, they are more virtuous, knowledgeable and spirited than most polygamist men. I e-mailed these plucky ladies, wished them the best, and told them it is the women and not the men who ought to hold the priesthood key because women in general are more gutsy, intellectually superior, and morally better equipped. I believe women are more capable of managing the polygamist groups. If they were in charge, there would be less larceny, less spouse abuse, fewer child molests, deception would decline and subterfuge held to a minimum.
    In a short telephone conversation with one of the women, she said their response from other polygamist women had been excellent and so far they had received seventy replies. I told her it validated my contention that there are good and honorable polygamists in Utah. I suggested they go public with the book. I had to make that same hard decision knowing that if Murder of a Prophet were published, it would open me up to public scrutiny and my past polygamist lifestyle.
    She said their book was for those inside the subculture. I was disappointed. Their stories should be told to balance out the negative and mythical side. As for me, I make no apologies or excuses for my past involvement. I received many personal blessings as an active polygamist, and I learned a great deal more about myself and how various people handle religion. I don’t recommend the lifestyle to others, and I discourage my children from following in my footsteps. The lifestyle is severe, demanding, exhausting, cruel at times, and contains some unsavory leadership predators who take advantage of good and well meaning people.

   Top

Introduction

In the Allred Group, known as Apostolic United Brethren, of the children born in the "principle" of plural marriage, many more leave than stay. For example, of 48 children sired by the late Rulon C. Allred, only about 17 stayed in the principle. This figure is consistent with the other large polygamist groups. In talking with leading members of the Allred Group, they estimated that between 65 and 80 percent of their children apostatize.
    A few of these dissident children contacted me after reading my novel, Murder of a Prophet. Their stories, together with my own observation and experiences, inspired me to contact other dissident children and write a second fact-based novel explaining why so many of these children leave. Their stories deserve to be told.

Apostolic United Brethren, the least oppressive sect of them all, is the basic model for my new novel, but I have also incorporated events and incidents from the other major groups, and from independent polygamists who belong to no group. I have created fictitious characters to represent the various types of teens and adults found in polygamy.
    Visualize, if you will, what it would be like for an attractive, seventeen year old girl to have her parents suddenly join a polygamist sect. It happened to Emma. One day her life was normal, the next day she was thrust into a polygamist subculture. Emma’s experiences, and the experiences of her friends, are typical of hundreds of young people living in cult-like Mormon polygamist sects.
    The story is told from Emma’s point of view, and from her perspective she sees little of the polygamist lifestyle to be desired. But as she moves about in the culture, she meets girls and women who find plural marriage desirable, secure, spiritual, and compatible in ways that satisfy their present needs and desires. If it were not so, there wouldn’t be so many of them.
    Women are the backbone and adhesive element that is indispensable to the success of polygamy. Many find plural marriage enriching, adventurous, more free and rewarding than monogamy. However, in some groups women are brainwashed and herded around until cut out like cattle. Others are skillfully programmed with inferiority complexes, making them dependent upon unscrupulous, lecherous leaders. Still others are raised in isolation making them ill-equipped to compete and survive in a modern cosmopolitan society. Some are by nature content to allow what they perceive as powerful, righteous men to take control of their lives.

To understand contemporary polygamy, one needs to see into the minds of these women. To understand the men in polygamy, one needs to study their need of power, dominance, and the male sex drive. To understand the polygamist sects, one must know that their theocratic leadership is more political than religious. Each sect is a monarchy ruled by a despot who is a juggler of love and fear, molding and manipulating the true believer to his advantage.   

 Top

Review  Murder of a ProphetLlewellyn's first book.


Salt Lake Tribune,
Greg Burton—Mar. 23 2000    
   
John R Lewellen looks every bit the part he plays in real life: father, retired cop and storyteller, a tweed-coated 66-year-old brimming with the miscellany of crime and impropriety in Utah. He is a character in many of the tales he tells—stories drawn from his days as a sheriff's detective. So it is a bit surprising that his first book is not "real," but a fictionalized drama of doomsday polygamists and that Llewellyn is nowhere to be found on the 180 or so pages. 
    Or is he? 
    Murder of a Prophet: The Dark Side of Utah Polygamy—published last month by Agreka Books of Sandy—has angered some of the region's polygamists. Leaders in Colorado City, Ariz., and Hilldale, Utah—where the old-time Mormon tenet of "celestial" or plural marriage prevails—have reportedly banned the book.
    Elsewhere, the story, a chronicle of a violent plot to unite all polygamists and topple the Mormon Church, has drawn praise for its true-to-life portrayal of the social fabric of Utah's religious subculture.
   
    Llewellyn is everything he purports to be and more. . . ." 

About John Llewellyn

 Investigator John R. Llewellyn was a deputy sheriff for twenty-three years in the Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office. Considered an expert, he spent a number of years in prolonged investigation of polygamy cults. He was often placed on loan to do special investigations for the County Attorney, District Attorney, and Attorney General.
    Conducting the preliminary investigation of mass murderer Ervil LeBaron, who was convicted of ordering the murder of Dr. Rulon C. Allred in 1977, Deputy Llewellyn complied an extensive intelligence profile of the infamous polygamist. He also assisted French, British, and local television companies—all wanting to film documentaries—make contact with appropriate members of polygamist groups. Mr. Llewellyn writes feature articles on the subject for newspapers and magazines.
    The author pioneered the Morals Squad of the Sheriff Department, which handled the investigation of polygamous complaints. He also wrote a sex crimes manual for the Utah State Police Academy, where he taught Sex Crime Investigation, Interview, and Interrogation.
    He is currently the lead investigator in two highly publicized lawsuits against Utah polygamist groups.  Read more about John LLewellyn
John may be contacted via e-mail: jrllewellyn@apcomp.com. 
His web site: http://www.polygamyversuscommonsense.com/

Books on polygamy. Click to read more.
1) A Teenager's Tears: When Parents Convert to Polygamy  
2)
Murder of a Prophet: Dark Side of Utah Polygamy

3) Polygamy Under Attack: From Tom Green to Brian David Mitchell
4) The Polygamists: A History of Colorado City, Arizona  As seen on CNN March 2004.
5) Colorado City Polygamists: An Inside Look for the Outsider

6) Polygamy's Rape of Rachael Strong: Protected Environment for Predators

 

   Top

  © Agreka Books • Contact  • Customer Service  • Privacy Site Map  Order