Unmask Alice LSD, satanic panic, and the imposter behind the world's most notorious diaries

Rick Emerson

Book - 2022

"Unmask Alice: LSD, Satanic Panic, and the Imposter Behind the Worlds Most Notorious Diaries is the true story of a young-adult blockbuster . . . of a terror that stalked 1980s America . . . and of the ruthless charlatan behind both"--

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  • Author's Note, Part One
  • Prologue: The Pretender
  • Part 1. About a Girl
  • Part 2. The Boy Who Died
  • Part 3. Gods and Monsters
  • Part 4. Contagion
  • Part 5. Shine a Light
  • Epilogue: After Forever
  • Author's Note, Part Two
  • Appendix
  • Acknowledgments
  • Photo Credits
Review by Booklist Review

In 1971, Go Ask Alice became an instant sensation. The anonymous diary detailed the life of a teen girl who tries LSD and is seduced into the fatal world of addiction. Emerson unveils the woman responsible for the book, Beatrice Sparks. Sparks, a "psychologist," claimed to have met Alice at a convention and published the diary as a cautionary tale at the request of Alice's parents. This story has never been corroborated. Go Ask Alice's success inspired suicide victim Alden Barrett's mother to send his journal to Sparks with hopes that she would raise awareness about mental health. Alden's story was twisted into 1978's Jay's Journal, a ludicrous tale about a young man driven to madness by devil worship. The fictional work, published and marketed as fact, tore apart the Barrett family and ignited the Satanic panic, ruining countless lives. An absorbing and unnerving read about how one conniving con artist's unquenchable thirst for acclaim fooled the publishing world and fed two cultural panics with lasting fallout, this book demands to be finished in one sitting.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.