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Evil Web

A True Story of Cult Abuse and Courage

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Mary Rich, an average, attractive, reasonably intelligent woman, allows herself and her family to be drawn into a twisted cultist's evil web in this often horrifying and bizarre but gripping and compelling true story. Cutting herself off from relatives and friends, she willingly follows him on a fanatical journey, thereby sentencing herself, her husband and their children to a prison of abuse and terror.
Leading them on their odyssey of torture and torment is Ronald Larrinaga, a charismatic, Bible-waving sociopath. He utilizes religion and fear to trap, enfold and render his victims helpless. As time passes, the Rich family become completely enslaved and follow his every dictate. The tension builds as they endure physical abuse, starvation, despair and suffering as tests of their obedience.
When the FBI and police confront Larrinaga, he eludes detection until Mary breaks the shackles of mind control, freeing herself and her family, then bringing their torturer to justice.
Evil Web depicts a battle for the soul, waged between the forces of good and evil. It is a story of terror, of despair, of struggle and ultimately of courage. Most important, it is a story of survival and of rebuilding.|

Mary Rich, an average, attractive, reasonably intelligent woman, allows herself and her family to be drawn into a twisted cultist's evil web in this often horrifying and bizarre but gripping and compelling true story. Cutting herself off from relatives and friends, she willingly follows him on a fanatical journey, thereby sentencing herself, her husband and their children to a prison of abuse and terror.
Leading them on their odyssey of torture and torment is Ronald Larrinaga, a charismatic, Bible-waving sociopath. He utilizes religion and fear to trap, enfold and render his victims helpless. As time passes, the Rich family become completely enslaved and follow his every dictate. The tension builds as they endure physical abuse, starvation, despair and suffering as tests of their obedience.
When the FBI and police confront Larrinaga, he eludes detection until Mary breaks the shackles of mind control, freeing herself and her family, then bringing their torturer to justice.
Evil Web depicts a battle for the soul, waged between the forces of good and evil. It is a story of terror, of despair, of struggle and ultimately of courage. Most important, it is a story of survival and of rebuilding.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 1, 1996
      Rich was obsessed with the subject of religion since childhood. She became a born-again Christian and married a man who shared most of her views but lacked her fervor. Together, they fell under the influence of self-appointed prophet Ron Larrinaga. They and their children joined his ``family,'' and eventually Mary and the children began to be beaten, starved and sexually abused, as were Larrinaga's own children. The core group, with other hangers-on, traveled around the U.S., trying to evade the law, primarily because the children were not sent to school. This life on the lam shut them off from contact with the outside world. Law enforcement officers had trouble closing in on Larrinaga, who claimed he was being persecuted for his religion. After he abandoned Rich, she came to her senses and filed criminal charges against him. Larrinaga, tried and convicted, was sentenced to 180 years. Assisted by Jose (coauthor of Guerrilla in Striped Pants), Rich tells a horror story of life in a cult. Yet while making it clear that the leader was a sadistic sociopath, Rich shows herself to be gullible, to say the least. Photos not seen by PW. 20,000 first printing; author tour.

    • Library Journal

      January 1, 1996
      Desperate for spiritual affirmation, Rich voluntarily endured years of increasingly vicious and degrading treatment at the hands of cult leader Ron Larrinaga. She was not alone. A Florida court eventually convicted Larrinaga on 42 counts of child abuse and sexual molestation, imprisoning him for 50 years. In this work, Rich and Jose (Sign of the Golden Grasshopper, LJ 4/15/95) vividly re-create not only the grotesque torments they suffered, but also the myopic, heedless trust that tolerates such abuse. An effectively rendered, emotionally gripping account, this work will surely become powerful ammunition for anticult partisans. It is, however, an admittedly unilateral account based on one person's memories: no corroboration or documentation is offered, and even years of occurrence are never specified. Libraries seeking a reliable, balanced investigation of cults and their problems should consider Madeline Tobias's Captive Hearts, Captive Minds (LJ 7/94) and, for reference, J. Gordon Melton's definitive Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America (Garland, 1992. 2d rev. ed.). Possibly for church libraries and, where there is strong interest, in public collections.-Bill Piekarski, Southwestern Coll. Lib., Chula Vista, Cal.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 1996
      In this frightening memoir, Rich recounts her association with "extremist cult leader" Ronald Larrinaga, who is every bit as fanatical as David Koresh, Jim Jones, and other more famous cult leaders. Rich and her family, who met the Larrinagas at church in San Luis Obispo, California, slowly became enmeshed in a bizarre web of physical, sexual, and emotional abuse carried out in the name of religion. With assistance from Jose, Rich recalls her perverse relationship with the religious zealot who subjected her and others in his small following to beatings, sexual molestation, and public humiliation. Finally extricating herself from the cult, Rich successfully brought charges against Larrinaga, who is currently serving time for child abuse and sexual molestation. Not without flaws, Rich's is yet an absorbing testimony from a Christian woman struggling to put her life back together. ((Reviewed January 1 & 15, 1996))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1996, American Library Association.)

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