For Ages
12 to 99

How did Jim Jones, the leader of Peoples Temple, convince more than 900 of his followers to commit "revolutionary suicide" by drinking cyanide-laced punch? From a master of narrative nonfiction comes a chilling chronicle of one of the most notorious cults in American history.

Using riveting first-person accounts, award-winning author Candace Fleming reveals the makings of a monster: from Jones’s humble origins as a child of the Depression… to his founding of a group whose idealistic…

An Excerpt fromDeath in the Jungle

Chapter One

One Weird Kid

The first time Jim Jones asked followers to play dead was on an autumn night in 1941.

The ten-­year-­old urged the other boys to come on.

They hesitated. Jimmy Jones wasn’t a friend. Not really. Sure, they hung around with him, but they didn’t like him. He was bossy and controlling. And he always got his way.

But there was something magnetic about him, too. Somehow, he coaxed them into doing things they knew they shouldn’t.

Take the previous week, for example. They’d been playing in the loft over the Joneses’ garage when Jimmy persuaded them to walk out on the rafters. They’d be like tightrope walkers in the circus, he’d said.

His playmates went first, slowly and in single file because the rafters were so narrow. Jimmy sidled out behind them. One of the boys looked down. It was a long way to the floor, at least ten feet. He tried to back off the rafter, but Jimmy wouldn’t budge.

“Move back!” the boy yelled.

“I can’t…

Under the Cover