Cult of the Great Eleven, Samuel Fort
Cult of the Great Eleven, Samuel Fort
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Cult of the Great Eleven

Author: Samuel Fort

Narrator: Ben Granger

Unabridged: 9 hr 18 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/18/2019

Categories: Nonfiction, True Crime


Synopsis

Cult of the Great Eleven is a true account of one of the twentieth century’s weirdest and most mysterious cults. Human and animal sacrifices, vanishings, the preserved corpse of a teenage cult princess, angelic encounters, a woman cooked in an oven, a mother chained to her bed for two months, resurrection experiments, refrigeration warehouses for the dead, abductions, nocturnal rituals, orgies, a breathing universe, an esoteric tome known as The Great Sixth Seal, hints of Hecate worship, and a post-apocalyptic world ruled by eleven queens from a hill in Hollywood…The United States witnessed an explosion of cult activity in the 1920s that today is almost inconceivable. California, in particular, was a haven for an estimated 200,000 cultists, with over 400 active cults in southern California alone. These ranged from “love cults” that conducted ritual orgies to “devil worshipping” cults that branded their members with hot irons and beheaded their enemies. Among all these, the Simi Valley's “Divine Order of the Royal Arms of the Great Eleven” was considered by many to be the most extraordinary. A death cult, the Great Eleven was founded by May Otis Blackburn, Portland, Oregon’s unheralded filmmaking pioneer, and Ruth Wieland, her luscious femme fatale daughter. The cult was so bizarre that accounts of its activities “elicited expressions of amazement” from justices on the California Supreme Court in 1931, who admitted, “they have never heard anything so weird.” Not until the nephew of oil magnate J.B. Dabney admitted he had been a member of the cult would the world at large learn of the existence the “divine order.” Not until detectives opened a trap door in the floor of a cult couple’s Venice cottage would the world be exposed to its darkest secrets.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Briar on May 27, 2019

This is an absolutely fascinating account of an obscure, matriarchal 1920's Hollywood death cult, led by a mother-daughter team after they failed to break into the movie business. The cult's bizarre theology drew from Christianity, the prosperity gospel, theosophy, pseudoscience, and possibly ancien......more

Goodreads review by ♥ Marlene♥ on February 12, 2017

This was a fun read but fun as in interesting, not fun as in oh what fun they had. No to the contrary I am glad I live now but then I wonder perhaps people will say that about our times. If they did I would agree. So glad I am not growing up now with the internet and the social media sheep. It was in......more

Goodreads review by Hutch on January 29, 2020

This is a small press book, and has plenty of room for editing. The opening sections that deal with the backstories of the primary figures in this book are sketchy, but once the Cult of the Great Eleven began operating, the book picks up quite a bit. It's obvious that a lot of research went into the......more

Goodreads review by C. on September 19, 2015

An interesting bit of detective work on obscure Christian cult form the early 20th century old craze. The book markets the situation as more diabolical than there is evidence for, but the strange mixture of Christian science, spiritualism, and con-artistry is fascinating. So is the founder's and her......more

Goodreads review by Angela on February 26, 2021

I am giving this book 2 stars merely for the subject matter, and the research involved in explaining it. I was disappointed in the style the book took on (there was a lot of repetition, speculation, and naming the members of the cult - many of whom we never heard of again - reminiscent of the the na......more