“Beautiful Revolutionary is some of the most exciting fiction I’ve encountered. It fearlessly explores the human elements that attracted masses to the Peoples Temple and to Jim Jones—fear, lust, the need to be loved, and the urge to feel a part of something larger than the self. This story cuts close to the bone, unrelenting and irrefutably true, over and over. Laura Elizabeth Woollett is an immense talent, and this is a bracing—and necessary—read.”
Kayla Rae Whitaker, author of The Animators
“Meticulously researched…Woollett’s prose is arresting—vivid without being flowery, subtle but still affecting. While the plot is dramatic and intriguing, the quality of Woollett’s prose is the most enjoyable aspect of this novel…This is an excellent work of literary historical fiction.”
Books+Publishing
“Woollett's writing makes this story an electricity storm. The clouds are weed smoke and the lightening charging through that haze is pure sexual energy. I'm almost half-way through and feel wholly transported. The world is both real and surreal; these characters alien and freakishly familiar to me. Completely gripping, and dripping with detail never overdone.”
Bri Lee, author of Eggshell Skull
“Woollett’s novel is brimming with historical detail and her depiction of Jonestown is impressive…A well-written account, it raises important questions about the desire for faith, especially in a time of crisis, and the dangerous appeal of a powerful personality dressed up as a revolutionary.”
Anna MacDonald, Australian Book Review
“It’s a novel that benefits from deep research worn lightly, and from Laura Elizabeth Woollett’s sensitivity to the perversity of human character and behavior. Beautiful Revolutionary turns the stations of the cross, each visited in the hope of salvation, into a meticulously paved road to hell.”
The Age
“Laura Elizabeth Woollett’s Beautiful Revolutionary grabs attention from the beginning, not with narrative hooks but with the sheer penetration of its prose. Woollett’s debut novel is an imaginative refiguring of the Jonestown massacre story…a truly exciting writer.”
Ed Wright, Weekend Australian
“It’s easy to see why Woollett is one of Australia’s leading young writers. The characters and observations are incisive and gripping, and prose masterful and electric.”
Good Reading
“She has taken years of extensive research, including interviews with surviving members of the Jones cult, then bent these facts into fictional shape…She follows Joan Didion, another sharp-eyed observer of the Californian scene in the '60s and '70s—another writer who appreciated how genuine human impulses could be harnessed and warped by the wrong kind of leader.”
The Saturday Paper
“Laura Elizabeth Woollett has embarked on a brave quest with Beautiful Revolutionary—and the risk has paid off, with her historically rich and breathtakingly entertaining story about one female hippie searching for life’s meaning in all the wrong places.”
Better Reading
“In order to write Beautiful Revolutionary, Laura Elizabeth Woollett spent years researching the Jonestown massacre. She interviewed surviving members of the People’s Temple and the families of those who died, creating an in-depth portrait of an era and one of its most extreme manifestations…perfect for fans of Emma Cline’s The Girls and The Family by Chris Johnston and Rosie Jones.”
Readings
“A beautifully-written and certainly compelling novel.”
The Lifted Brow
“The book is the author’s interpretive fictional account, overlaid on a well-researched framework of fact and first-person description…Her writing is thought-provoking and at times luminous.”
Rosa Shiels, Stuff, 'Books of the week September 1, 2018’
“[The] highlight of this book is Woollett’s prose style, which beautifully conveys the details of what is going on while at the same time wielding a less is more touch and power of suggestion, to maximize the psychological and physical tension of the story…Beautiful Revolutionary is part twisted love story, part dark, noirish, crime novel. I recommend it.”
Pulp Curry
“Absolutely mesmerizing. I didn’t want this to end…This story is meticulously researched and gets into your heart and mind and remains there for quite some time…[Woollett’s] a master of character and atmosphere.”
Sam Still Reading
“Beautiful Revolutionary has had me completely mesmerized—it has been so long since I’ve been so utterly engrossed and absorbed in a novel. The shifts in perspective are masterfully handled and offer a fascinating and nuanced portrait of Jim Jones' Peoples Temple. I do love cult novels and this is one of the best of them. The tension build to the inevitable conclusion is incredibly well done. I have nothing but love for this book, five beautiful stars. It's my number one Australian novel of the year.”
Jaclyn Crupi, Bookseller at Hill of Content bookstore
“A deeply intelligent telling of a deeply disturbing sideshow of history.”
John Purcell, Booktopia
“Woollett is considered Australia's foremost expert on Jonestown, and her novel is a riveting tale of love, obsession and devotion. If you loved The Girls or Netflix's Wild Wild Country, this one's for you.”
Elle
“A rich portrait of a highly mythologised historical incident. The passion that the author has had for her research shines through…for readers who appreciate a well-written, well-researched novel that approaches things from different angles.”
Emily Paull, The AU Review
“Expertly done.”
Daily Mail
“Beautiful Revolutionary suggests that the cult members are victims of Jones because they are victims of the time, swept up in the moment, fired by the rhetoric of revolution.”
Xan Brooks, The Guardian
“[T]raverses the uneasy terrain between historical fiction and all that cannot be known about the inner lives of real people. History blends with mythology…[D]evastating…Weighty and disquieting.”
Kirkus
“Woollett turns a dark chapter in U.S. history into a deeply human, satisfying read for fans of Emma Cline’s The Girls.”
Booklist
“She reclaims victims’ narratives from sensationalist headlines and re-educates her readers through sharp, expertly crafted fiction…Her economy of language is striking; certain chapters are a page in length yet relay a multitude. The “revolutionary suicide” that froze Jonestown in popular culture is injected into every carefully composed sentence in which Woollett conflates violence with joy.”
Anna Joyce, Irish Times
“Woollett achieves psychologically complex portraits of her two protagonists — minister’s daughter Evelyn and conscientious objector Lenny — as they are indoctrinated into a degrading system of punishment and reward that delivers dire consequences for their marriage and sense of selfhood. Wry and incisive, but also imbued with great empathy for the trauma Jones wrought, Beautiful Revolutionary compels the reader to consider the conditions and compromises that allow groupthink to overpower individual responsibility and agency.”
Prime Minister’s Literary Award for Fiction, Judges’ Comments
Praise for The Love of a Bad Man:
“Beautifully written—poised and elegant.”
The Daily Mail
Praise for The Love of a Bad Man:
“Absorbing.”
Elle