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Manhattan Cult Story
Manhattan Cult Story: My Unbelievable True Story of Sex, Crimes, Chaos, and Survival | Spencer Schneider
2 posts | 3 read | 5 to read
We were invisible. We had to be. We took an oath of absolute secrecy. We never even told our immediate families who we were. We went about our lives in New York City. Just like you. We were your accountants, money managers, lawyers, executive recruiters, doctors. We owned your childs private school and sold you your brownstone. But youd never guess our secret lives, how we lived in a kind of silent terror and fervor. There were hundreds of us. Right under the noses of neighbors, clients, spouses, children, and friends, a secret society, simply called Schoola cult of snared Manhattan professionalshas been led by the charismatic, sociopathic and dangerous leader Sharon Gans for decades. Spencer Schneider was recruited in the eighties and he stayed for more than twenty-three years as his life disintegrated, his self-esteem eroded, and he lined the pockets of Gans and her cult. Cult members met twice weekly, though they never acknowledged one another outside of meetings or gatherings. In the name of inner development, they endured the horrors of mental, sexual, and physical abuse, forced labor, arranged marriages, swindled inheritances and savings, and systematic terrorizing. Some of them broke the law. All for Gans. During those years, Schneider writes, my world was School. Thats what its like when youre in a cult, even one that preys on and caters to New Yorks educated elite. This is my story of how I got entangled in School and how I got out. At its core, Manhattan Cult Story is a cautionary tale of how hundreds of well-educated, savvy, and prosperous New Yorkers became fervent followers of a brilliant but demented cult leader who posed as a teacher of ancient knowledge. Its about double-lives, the power of group psychology, and how easy it is to be radicalizedall too relevant in today's atmosphere of conspiracy and ideologue worship.
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review
Megabooks
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Mehso-so

This book about a controlling cult for yuppie Manhattanites was my first read of the year (and I‘m reviewing it on the 10th 😬). It started good but quickly became dull. I think it came down to a lack of concrete examples of the bad behavior of the leader. It somehow got caught up in the tedium of daily life and lacked any kind of punch. 🤷🏻‍♀️

Find me on the storygraph! Same handle. 👍🏻😁

BarbaraBB I do follow you. But you don‘t accept friends request (you‘ve turned that off probably) 🤷🏻‍♀️💕 1w
Chelsea.Poole I follow you too! I should find more Litsy folks over there… 1w
56 likes2 comments
review
Addison_Reads
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Pickpick

#NetGalley #ARC

I have always been fascinated by cults. In this tale of deception, Spencer takes the reader from the beginning to the end of his time spent devoting his life to an underground, "invisible" cult. Before this read I had never heard of Sharon Gans and her cult. Spencer gives great detail about the program used, School, to lure people in and make them give up family and friends until their entire world is secret.

46 likes2 stack adds