The Church of Fear
Inside the Weird World of Scientology
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Narrated by:
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John Sweeney
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By:
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John Sweeney
About this listen
Tom Cruise and John Travolta say the Church of Scientology is a force for good. Others disagree.
Award-winning journalist John Sweeney investigated the Church for more than half a decade. During that time he was intimidated, spied on, and followed, and the results were spectacular: Sweeney lost his temper with the Church's spokesman on camera, and his infamous 'exploding tomato' clip was seen by millions around the world.
In The Church of Fear, Sweeney tells the full story of his experiences for the first time and paints a devastating picture of this strange organisation, from former Scientologists who tell heartbreaking stories of families torn apart and lives ruined to its current followers who say it is the solution to many of mankind's problems.
This is the real story of the Church by the reporter who was brave enough to take it on.
John Sweeney is a reporter for BBC Panorama. He is the author of six previous books including the novel Elephant Moon.
©2013 John Sweeney (P)2015 Audible, LtdCritic reviews
"Gripping." (The Economist)
"A brave book." (Liverpool Daily Post)
"Blackly comic." (The Humanist)
What listeners say about The Church of Fear
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- Jude Uk
- 30-06-15
Brilliant, funny and scary
Really enjoyed this and loved the way he reads his own work. Found myself giggling along to the relentless questions he puts to the church members. Definitely recommend
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4 people found this helpful
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- NinaB
- 09-01-20
Wtf
This book is insane! It’s written and narrated really well, with a sarcastic British humour from Sweeney from his dealings with the church and the crazy mind games they play with him and others. Very gripping.
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- Chris
- 10-08-15
Fantastic
Absolutely enthralling, chose this purely because of the YouTube video and wasn't disappointed. With a wonderful mixture of humour and honesty Sweeney paints a picture that may seem hard to believe but will have you hooked from start to finish.
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8 people found this helpful
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- Phoebe
- 03-03-18
Good book but too long
Great account and nice narration by the author himself. Felt the book was a little too long though, could have done with being an hour or so shorter.
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- Lewis M.
- 02-04-24
Could Not Stop Listening.
Literally listened to the entire 10-hour book in one go - It’s absolutely fascinating, as are John Sweeney’s other books, which he obviously does a fantastic job at narrating.
At several points I had to remind myself that this isn’t fiction; that these people actually exist - But the twists and turns sometimes read more like a dramatised crime-thriller, which will keep you hanging on every word from start to finish.
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- kathryn
- 19-07-18
Eye opening!
Eye opening and disturbing. This is an excellent book. John Sweeney's narration is also brilliant.
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- Nephrite
- 19-02-20
The Conquerors Of Clearwater
The Church Of Fear: Inside The Weird World of Scientology by John Sweeney
This is an interesting article to write to put it mildly. To explain somewhat to my readers apart from my interest in science-fiction/fantasy, history, crime and other genres I’ve covered previously, I have a self-confessed fascination with the bizarre. Especially cult like movements and behaviour such as Rajneeshpuram, Heaven’s Gate, the movement responsible for the infamous Japanese sarin gas attacks and others along those lines.
So when I was searching for a new listen a few years ago and noticed a book on Scientology it piqued my interest. And on top of that it was written by John Sweeney? The BBC Panorama reporter famous and going viral for – as he puts it in the book – turning into an ‘exploding tomato’? You had my curiosity…now you have my attention.
The book itself is a 50/50 affair. Sweeney endeavours to mix an autobiographical account from the perspective of the Panorama crew as to what happened during the recording of their 2007 programme on the Church of Scientology including lots of details that didn’t make it into the final programme for various reasons and a dissection on how the Church operates behind closed doors based on interviews with ex-members – of all levels – and experts in various subjects. It makes an interesting listen if the subject interests you with a lot of details I would have never have believed if it wasn’t coming from reputable sources.
Personally I found the book absolutely fascinating and engrossing. Although I can safely say it is not for the faint of heart. Some of the stories break your heart. Some of them make you feel sick. And some of them make you want to punch a hole in the wall. Sweeney may have ‘gone tomato’ when he did. But honestly? If he were me? I would have exploded long before that point. I’m not exactly balanced when it comes to the subject having read and watched enough over the years to have made my mind up long ago. If you listen to the audiobook? Or read the paper version? You can make your own judgements. Although I repeat again: Know what you are getting into.
The narration for the audiobook version is performed by Sweeney himself. To be honest having listened to the book a few times, I can’t really imagine it any other way. His narration really helps you get into his headspace when they are being followed by the Church or when he discusses his complete self-confessed paranoia by the time of his last few days in the United States. When bringing up facts and information he conveys the details well – as can be expected of a reporter. As a listener I find myself being able to understand the information presented and take it in and make my own decisions as required. The combination works really well in my mind and makes the total package feel consistent and coherent. I get the feeling that a version with a different narrator would come across worse given the first-person nature of much of the narrative.
In conclusion this is an audiobook I do recommend if you are interested in the subject and feel you can cope with some of the places it goes. I understand that this is NOT everyone’s cup of tea – to put it mildly – and I hope to return to my usual oeuvre with my next article.
Sayonara!
Nephrite
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- Emma Moss
- 19-12-20
Fascinating
A great compliment to the documentary. Would love a follow up documentary where John pursues Tommy!
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- Adam Buckler
- 16-08-15
narration of arguments was impossible to follow
Following the arguments between John and the scientologists was difficult enough on panorama but the narrator terrors to convey that confusion by just speed reading those bits such that it is genuinely impossible to keep up.
the book also repeats itself a fair bit, particularly when discussing the indicators of a cult. this gave me an impression that it might be padding a bit.
The subject matter is genuinely interesting and the story portrays the craziness and aggressiveness of the people he is dealing with well. I just get the feeling it would be a better read than listen.
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2 people found this helpful
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- Kirsty G.
- 03-03-19
such a good listen
such a good listen. listern to the whole book in two days at work. best book so far
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