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Secret Ceremonies by Deborah Laake β€” book cover

Secret Ceremonies

by Deborah Laake, Meredith MacRae (Narrated by)
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Overview

Secret Ceremonies is the story of the awakening of Deborah Laake. A devout Mormon, she attended Brigham Young University, received good grades, was popular – but most of all, she found the One, the man who declared that his claim to her was a matter of divine revelation. Thus, while still in her teens she was married in the sacred chambers of a Mormon temple. From there her life began to disintegrate. Divorced by age twenty from a man she never loved, barred from the Mormon temple and threatened with excommunication, she found her depression deepening. Still trying to live up to the church's expectations, she married again, unaware that the resulting mental illness would propel her into a hospital ward of unabashed psychotics. It was there, among the truly unconventional, she somehow recognized a modern world beckoning to her from beyond the closed patriarchal society that had always sheltered her yet kept her from true maturity.

This compassionate, often funny, but brutally honest insider's look at modernMormon society is also a complex rite of passage story--a story of the battlebetween religious faith and personal integrity. 2 cassettes.

About the Author, Deborah Laake

Deborah Laake was a staff writer and columnist for the Dallas Morning News and editor and executive at New Times. She was famous for her 1993 book entitled 'Secret Ceremonies' in which she criticized the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

Deborah Laake was a staff writer and columnist for the Dallas Morning News and editor and executive at New Times. She was famous for her 1993 book entitled 'Secret Ceremonies' in which she criticized the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Laake, raised as a strict Mormon, was taught from childhood that Mormon men were ``priesthood holders'' anointed with the authority to act for God on earth, and that her entrance into heaven could be assured only if she married a Mormon man who would be her master. As a 19-year-old sophomore at Brigham Young University, she became a Mormon wife. Laake's heartfelt record of this disastrous first marriage and the years of struggle that followed is at once autobiography and an expose of the repressive patriarchalism of the Mormon church. After her divorce, for example, Laake found that although her ex-husband retained his religious privileges, she was banned from the temple and condemned by Mormon elders. Torn between her loyalty to herself and to her church's teachings, she plunged into a second Mormon marriage; it, too, failed, and led to a mental breakdown. Laake, now executive managing editor of the New Times magazine chain, writes that she has emerged from her experiences as an independent woman, no longer in thrall to religious dogma. This is a haunting and candid memoir. (Apr.)

Booknews

Silly account of life in the LDS Church and with a couple of rigid Mormon men. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

From Barnes & Noble

A lyrical, sometimes funny, compassionate, and brutally honest inside look at modern Mormon society that describes the mysterious rituals and rigorous traditions of this fastest growing of world religions.

Book Details

Published
January 25, 2010
Publisher
Phoenix Books, Inc.
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781597779944

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