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| name = Martha Beck | name = Martha Beck
| image = | image =
| imagesize =
| alt = | alt =
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| birth_name = Martha Nibley | birth_name = Martha Nibley
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1962|11|29}} | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1962|11|29}}
| birth_place = ] | birth_place = ], U.S.
| occupation = ], ], ] | occupation = {{hlist|]|]|]|]}}
| notable_works = ''Leaving the Saints''
| alma_mater = ] | alma_mater = ]
| website = {{URL|MarthaBeck.com}} | website = {{URL|MarthaBeck.com}}
| spouse = John Beck (1983–2004) | spouse = {{marriage|John Beck|1983|2004|end=div}}
| children = 3 | children = 3
| parent = ]
|
}} }}
'''Martha Nibley Beck''' (born November 29, 1962) is an American ], ], ], and ].
'''Martha Nibley Beck''' (born November 29, 1962) is an American ], ], and ] who specializes in helping individuals and groups achieve greater levels of personal and professional success. She holds three degrees, a BA, MA and PhD from ]. Beck is the daughter of deceased ] scholar and ] ]. She received national attention after publication in 2005 of her best-seller, ''Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith'' in which she recounts her experiences of surviving ]. In addition to authoring several books, Beck is a columnist for '']''.


She holds ], ], and ] degrees from ]. Beck is the daughter of ], a deceased scholar of ] (LDS Church) and ]. She received national attention after publication in 2005 of her best-seller, ''Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith'' in which she recounts her experiences of surviving ]. In addition to authoring several books, Beck is a columnist for '']''.
==Biography==
===Early life and education===
Martha Nibley was born in ], in 1962, the seventh of eight children of ] and Phyllis Nibley, and raised LDS in a prominent Utah family. Her father was a professor at Brigham Young University. She received a ] degree in ], along with an ] and a ] in ] from ].<ref name="Leaving">{{cite book|isbn=978-0-307-33599-9|publisher=Three Rivers Press|title=Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith|year=2006|last=Beck|first=Martha N|url=https://archive.org/details/leavingsaintshow00beck_0}}</ref><ref name="nytleaving">{{cite news |last1=Wyatt |first1=Edward |title=A Mormon Daughter's Book Stirs a Storm |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/24/books/a-mormon-daughters-book-stirs-a-storm.html |access-date=14 January 2022 |work=The New York Times |date=24 February 2005}}</ref>


===Career=== ==Early life==
Martha Nibley was born in ], in 1962, the seventh of eight children of Hugh and Phyllis Nibley, and raised a ] in a prominent Utah family. Her father was a professor at ] (BYU). She received a bachelor's degree in ], along with master's and PhD degrees in ] from Harvard University.<ref name="Leaving">{{cite book|isbn=978-0-307-33599-9|publisher=Three Rivers Press|title=Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith|year=2006|last=Beck|first=Martha N|url=https://archive.org/details/leavingsaintshow00beck_0}}</ref><ref name="nytleaving">{{cite news |last1=Wyatt |first1=Edward |title=A Mormon Daughter's Book Stirs a Storm |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/24/books/a-mormon-daughters-book-stirs-a-storm.html |access-date=14 January 2022 |work=The New York Times |date=24 February 2005}}</ref>
During her academic career, Beck worked as a research associate at ], studying career paths and life-course changes. Before becoming a life coach, she taught sociology, ], ], and ] at Harvard and the ]. She has published academic books and articles on a variety of social science and business topics. Her non-academic books include the ''New York Times'' bestsellers ''Expecting Adam'' and ''Leaving the Saints'', as well as ''Finding Your Own North Star: Claiming the Life You Were Meant to Live'', ''Steering by Starlight'', and ''Finding Your Way in a Wild New World: Reclaiming Your True Nature''.


==Career==
Beck has also been a contributing editor for popular magazines, including '']'' and '']'', and has been a columnist for ''O, the Oprah Magazine'' since July 2001. Her latest book, ''The Martha Beck Collection: Essays on Creating Your Right Life, Volume 1'', includes essays from her ''O, the Oprah Magazine'' column. Beck is president of Martha Beck, Inc., which offers a life coach training and certification program based on Beck's books.
During her academic career, Beck worked as a research associate at the ], studying career paths and life-course changes. Before becoming a life coach, she taught sociology, ], ], and ] at Harvard and the ]. She has published academic books and articles on a variety of social science and business topics. Her non-academic books include ] bestsellers ''Expecting Adam'' and ''Leaving the Saints'', as well as ''Finding Your Own North Star: Claiming the Life You Were Meant to Live'', ''Steering by Starlight'', and ''Finding Your Way in a Wild New World: Reclaiming Your True Nature'', and ''The Way of Integrity: Finding the Path to Your True Self''.


Beck has also been a contributing editor for popular magazines, including '']'' and '']'', and has been a columnist for ''O, the Oprah Magazine'' since July 2001. Beck is the founder of Martha Beck, Inc., which offers Wayfinder Life Coach Training, and other courses based on Beck’s philosophies.
===Personal life===
Beck met John Christen Beck, a fellow Mormon from ], during her undergraduate studies at Harvard. They married in the LDS ] on June 21, 1983, in ], and they eventually had three children together.<ref name="Divorce">{{cite court|litigants=Martha Nibley Beck v. John Christen Beck|vol=FC 2003-006435|reporter=Superior Court of Arizona Maricopa County|date=2003|url=http://www.courtminutes.maricopa.gov/docs/Family%20Court/112004/m1601998.pdf|accessdate=2007-04-24}}</ref>


==Personal life==
After the birth of their second child, Adam, who had been diagnosed with ] prior to his birth, Beck returned with her husband and children to Utah to be closer to family and support. ''Expecting Adam: A True Story of Birth, Rebirth and Everyday Magic'' is Beck's story about her decision to give birth to and raise Adam.<ref name="Adam">{{cite book|title=Expecting Adam|last=Beck|first=Martha N|publisher=Platkus Books|year=2001|isbn=978-0-7499-2190-3}}</ref>
Beck met John Christen Beck, a fellow LDS Church member from ], during her undergraduate studies at Harvard. They married in the ] in ] on June 21, 1983. They eventually had three children together.<ref name="Divorce">{{cite court|litigants=Martha Nibley Beck v. John Christen Beck|vol=FC 2003-006435|reporter=Superior Court of Arizona Maricopa County|date=2003|url=http://www.courtminutes.maricopa.gov/docs/Family%20Court/112004/m1601998.pdf|accessdate=2007-04-24}}</ref>


In 1990, soon after the birth of her third child, Beck, as a part-time faculty member at ] (BYU) in Provo, Utah, taught a course on the sociology of gender in the Department of Social Science. During her time as part-time faculty member at BYU, five faculty members were excommunicated from the ] as a consequence of public writings that were deemed critical of the church; the group became known as the ]. She and husband John Beck also made critical public statements about both the excommunications and other church and BYU matters, which led to first John, then Martha herself, leaving the LDS Church in 1993.<ref name="Leaving"/><ref>{{cite news |title= Mormon Inquisition? LDS Leaders Move To Repress Rebellion |url= http://www.utlm.org/newsletters/no85.htm |date=November 1993|last= Tanner |first= Jerald and Sandra |author-link= Jerald and Sandra Tanner |newspaper= Salt Lake Messenger |publisher= Utah Lighthouse Ministry |issue= 85 |access-date= 2013-08-18 }}</ref>{{Unreliable source?|date=August 2013}} After the birth of their second child, Adam, who had been diagnosed with ] prior to his birth, Beck returned with her husband and children to Utah to be closer to family and support. ''Expecting Adam: A True Story of Birth, Rebirth and Everyday Magic'' is Beck's story about her decision to give birth to and raise Adam.<ref name="Adam">{{cite book|title=Expecting Adam|last=Beck|first=Martha N|publisher=Platkus Books|year=2001|isbn=978-0-7499-2190-3}}</ref>
In 1990, soon after the birth of her third child, Beck, as a part-time faculty member at BYU in Provo, Utah, taught a course on the sociology of gender in the Department of Social Science. During her time as part-time faculty member at BYU, five Mormon scholars were excommunicated from the LDS Church as a consequence of public writings that were deemed critical of the church; the group became known as the ]. She and husband, John Beck, also made critical public statements about both the excommunications and other church and BYU matters, which led to first John, then Martha herself, leaving the LDS Church in 1993.<ref name="Leaving"/><ref>{{cite news |title= Mormon Inquisition? LDS Leaders Move To Repress Rebellion |url= http://www.utlm.org/newsletters/no85.htm |date=November 1993|last= Tanner |first= Jerald and Sandra |author-link= Jerald and Sandra Tanner |newspaper= Salt Lake Messenger |publisher= Utah Lighthouse Ministry |issue= 85 |access-date= 2013-08-18 }}</ref>{{Unreliable source?|date=August 2013}}


Since leaving the LDS Church, both Martha Beck and her now ex-husband subsequently came out publicly as ]. In 2003, Beck separated from her husband, divorcing him in 2004.<ref name="Divorce"/> She now lives with her family in Pennsylvania.<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://marthabeck.com/bio/|title = Bio - Martha Beck|website = Martha Beck|language = en-US|access-date = 2016-03-03}}</ref> Since leaving the LDS Church, both Martha Beck and her now ex-husband subsequently came out publicly as ]. In 2003, Beck separated from her husband, divorcing him in 2004.<ref name="Divorce"/> She now lives with her family in Pennsylvania.<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://marthabeck.com/bio/|title = Bio - Martha Beck|website = Martha Beck|language = en-US|access-date = 2016-03-03}}</ref>

Beck's first book, coauthored with John Beck, ''Breaking the Cycle of Compulsive Behavior,'' treated homosexuality as one of several "compulsive behaviors," like bulimia.<ref>{{cite book|title=Breaking the Cycle of Compulsive Behavior|last=Beck|first=Martha Nibley|author2=Beck, John C|year=1990|publisher=Deseret Book Company|isbn=978-0-87579-290-3|url=https://archive.org/details/breakingcycleofc00beck}}</ref><ref name="nytleaving"/> However, both Martha Beck and John Beck have stated that they no longer consider homosexuality a form of compulsive behavior.<ref>{{citation |url= http://www.affirmation.org/news/2005_08.shtml |title= LDS Couple Who Dubbed Homosexuality "Addiction" Come Out |date= 27 February 2005 |last= Clark |first= Jason |publisher= ] |access-date= 2007-04-24 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120724211141/http://www.affirmation.org/news_2005/2005_08.shtml |archive-date= 2012-07-24 }}</ref>


==''Leaving the Saints''== ==''Leaving the Saints''==
{{see also|Satanic panic (Utah)}}
Beck's 2005 book ''Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith'' was controversial for accusations that she was sexually abused by her father, scholar and LDS Church apologist Hugh Nibley, as well as stating she ] of the abuse.<ref name="nytleaving"/><ref name="wapoleaving">{{cite news |last1=Reid |first1=T. R. |title=Daughter's Denunciation of Historian Roils Mormon Church |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/07/AR2005050700981.html |access-date=14 January 2022 |newspaper=Washington Post |date=8 May 2005}}</ref><ref name="deseretleaving">{{cite news |last1=News |first1=Deseret |title=Nibley siblings outraged over sister's book |url=https://www.deseret.com/2005/2/9/19875592/nibley-siblings-outraged-over-sister-s-book |access-date=14 January 2022 |work=Deseret News |date=9 February 2005 |language=en}}</ref> She writes that she had forgotten the abuse until later in her life when, in 1990, she recovered them. The veracity of recovered memories is disputed, and the ] says "there is a consensus among memory researchers and clinicians that most people who were sexually abused as children remember all or part of what happened to them," though there is also agreement among most leaders in the field, "that although it is a rare occurrence, a memory of early childhood abuse that has been forgotten can be remembered later."<ref name="nytleaving"/> The allegations have been denied by Beck's mother and seven siblings.<ref name="nytleaving"/><ref name="wapoleaving"/><ref name="deseretleaving"/> The book prompted widespread reaction, much of it within the Mormon community, and an email campaign against the book's inclusion on ]'s website as well as in her magazine.<ref name="nytleaving"/><ref name="wapoleaving"/> In her book she writes "The peculiar details of my memories had at first made me doubt myself -- they were so weird -- but in the end, reinforced my conviction that I hadn't unconsciously made something up."


A New York Times article sums up with "Church members are also angry that Beck jokes about aspects of the Mormon faith; for example, she refers to the religious garments that Mormons wear in their temples as "holy long johns." But the main complaint about "Leaving the Saints" is that Beck has targeted one of the most admired of all the Latter-day Saints. "Books by apostates from the church, they come along all the time," Wotherspoon, of Sunstone Magazine, said. "But an attack on Hugh Nibley -- to call Hugh Nibley a pedophile and a liar, with no evidence to back it up -- of course that is going to hit the Mormon community like an earthquake."
Beck's 2005 book ''Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith'' was controversial for accusations that she was sexually abused by her father, scholar and ] apologist ], as well as stating she ] of the abuse.<ref name="nytleaving"/><ref name="wapoleaving">{{cite news |last1=Reid |first1=T. R. |title=Daughter's Denunciation of Historian Roils Mormon Church |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/07/AR2005050700981.html |access-date=14 January 2022 |work=Washington Post |date=8 May 2005}}</ref><ref name="deseretleaving">{{cite news |last1=News |first1=Deseret |title=Nibley siblings outraged over sister's book |url=https://www.deseret.com/2005/2/9/19875592/nibley-siblings-outraged-over-sister-s-book |access-date=14 January 2022 |work=Deseret News |date=9 February 2005 |language=en}}</ref> She writes that she had forgotten the abuse until later in her life when, in 1990, she recovered them. The veracity of recovered memories is disputed, and the ] says "there is a consensus among memory researchers and clinicians that most people who were sexually abused as children remember all or part of what happened to them," though there is also agreement among most leaders in the field, "that although it is a rare occurrence, a memory of early childhood abuse that has been forgotten can be remembered later."<ref name="nytleaving"/> The allegations have been denied by Beck's mother and seven siblings.<ref name="nytleaving"/><ref name="wapoleaving"/><ref name="deseretleaving"/> The book prompted widespread reaction, much of it within the Mormon community, and an email campaign against the book's inclusion on ]'s website as well as in her magazine.<ref name="nytleaving"/><ref name="wapoleaving"/>


==Works== ==Works==
Line 58: Line 59:
* {{cite book |last= Beck |first= Martha |author-mask= 2 |year= 2011 |title= Finding Your Way in a Wild New World: Reclaim Your True Nature to Create the Life You Want |location= New York |publisher= ] |isbn= 978-1-4516-2448-9 |url= https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781451624489 }} * {{cite book |last= Beck |first= Martha |author-mask= 2 |year= 2011 |title= Finding Your Way in a Wild New World: Reclaim Your True Nature to Create the Life You Want |location= New York |publisher= ] |isbn= 978-1-4516-2448-9 |url= https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781451624489 }}
* {{Cite book |last= Beck |first= Martha |author-mask= 2 |year= 2013 |title= The Martha Beck Collection: Essays on Creating Your Right Life |type= ] |volume=1 |location= San Luis Obispo, California |publisher= Martha Beck, Inc |isbn= 978-0989306706 }} * {{Cite book |last= Beck |first= Martha |author-mask= 2 |year= 2013 |title= The Martha Beck Collection: Essays on Creating Your Right Life |type= ] |volume=1 |location= San Luis Obispo, California |publisher= Martha Beck, Inc |isbn= 978-0989306706 }}
* {{Cite book |last= Beck |first= Martha |author-mask= 2 |year= 2016 |title= Diana, Herself: An Allegory of Awakening |type= ] |location= San Luis Obispo, California |publisher= Cynosure Publishing |isbn= 978-1944264000 }} * {{Cite book |last= Beck |first= Martha |author-mask= 2 |year= 2016 |title= Diana, Herself: An Allegory of Awakening |type= ] |location= San Luis Obispo, California |publisher= Cynosure Publishing |isbn= 978-1944264000 }}
* {{Cite book |last= Beck |first= Martha |author-mask= 2 |year= 2021 |title= The Way of Integrity: Finding the Path to Your True Self |publisher= Penguin |type= ]|isbn= 978-1984881489 }}
{{refend}} {{refend}}


;Thesis ;Thesis
*{{Cite thesis |last= Beck |first= Martha Nibley |year= 1994 |title= Flight from the iron cage: LDS women's responses to the paradox of modernization |type= Ph.D. |publisher= Harvard University |oclc= 32034090 }} *{{Cite thesis |last= Beck |first= Martha Nibley |year= 1994 |title= Flight from the iron cage: LDS women's responses to the paradox of modernization |type= PhD |publisher= Harvard University |oclc= 32034090 }}

;Multimedia
Beck is also creator of a number of non-book products, primarily digital recording services that offer education and various life coaching strategies.
* ''The "Wild New You" eCourse'' - a product based on a four-week live telecourse covering Beck's book, ''Finding Your Way in a Wild New World''.
* ''Starlight Seminar-Leading Your Life DVD Set'' - A five-DVD set of Martha's one-day seminar based on her book, ''Steering by Starlight''.
* ''Martha Beck's 'What Do I Want To Be When I Grow Up?' Workbook and CD Set'' - Set of 5 CDs and a 126-page workbook of Martha's six-week live telecourse of the same name.


==References== ==References==
Line 74: Line 70:


==External links== ==External links==
* {{Official website|http://marthabeck.com/}} at MarthaBeck.com * {{Official website|http://marthabeck.com/}}
* {{citation |url= http://www.oprah.com/contributor/martha-beck |title= Martha Beck: Life coach |work= Oprah.com }} * {{citation |url= http://www.newleafspeakers.com/?page_id=18 |title = Martha Beck, PhD, Best-selling author, Columnist for O, The Oprah Magazine |date = August 27, 2014 }}
* {{citation |url = http://www.newleafspeakers.com/?page_id=18 |title = Martha Beck, PhD, Best-selling author, Columnist for O, The Oprah Magazine |work= NewLeafSpeakers.com }} — Beck's professional speakers' agency * {{citation |url= https://www.lyceumagency.com/speakers/martha-beck |title= Martha Beck: Life coach |work= Beck's professional speakers' agency |date= April 8, 2020 }}


{{Authority control}} {{Authority control}}
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Latest revision as of 17:36, 17 November 2024

American sociologist This article is about the author and life coach. For the serial killer, see Martha Beck (serial killer).

Martha Beck
BornMartha Nibley
(1962-11-29) November 29, 1962 (age 62)
Provo, Utah, U.S.
Occupation
Alma materHarvard University
Notable worksLeaving the Saints
Spouse John Beck ​ ​(m. 1983; div. 2004)
Children3
ParentHugh Nibley
Website
marthabeck.com

Martha Nibley Beck (born November 29, 1962) is an American author, life coach, speaker, and sociologist.

She holds bachelor's, master's, and PhD degrees from Harvard University. Beck is the daughter of Hugh Nibley, a deceased scholar of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and apologist. She received national attention after publication in 2005 of her best-seller, Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith in which she recounts her experiences of surviving sexual abuse. In addition to authoring several books, Beck is a columnist for O, The Oprah Magazine.

Early life

Martha Nibley was born in Provo, Utah, in 1962, the seventh of eight children of Hugh and Phyllis Nibley, and raised a Latter-day Saint in a prominent Utah family. Her father was a professor at Brigham Young University (BYU). She received a bachelor's degree in East Asian studies, along with master's and PhD degrees in sociology from Harvard University.

Career

During her academic career, Beck worked as a research associate at the Harvard Business School, studying career paths and life-course changes. Before becoming a life coach, she taught sociology, social psychology, organizational behavior, and business management at Harvard and the American Graduate School of International Management. She has published academic books and articles on a variety of social science and business topics. Her non-academic books include New York Times bestsellers Expecting Adam and Leaving the Saints, as well as Finding Your Own North Star: Claiming the Life You Were Meant to Live, Steering by Starlight, and Finding Your Way in a Wild New World: Reclaiming Your True Nature, and The Way of Integrity: Finding the Path to Your True Self.

Beck has also been a contributing editor for popular magazines, including Real Simple and Redbook, and has been a columnist for O, the Oprah Magazine since July 2001. Beck is the founder of Martha Beck, Inc., which offers Wayfinder Life Coach Training, and other courses based on Beck’s philosophies.

Personal life

Beck met John Christen Beck, a fellow LDS Church member from Utah, during her undergraduate studies at Harvard. They married in the Salt Lake Temple in Salt Lake City, Utah on June 21, 1983. They eventually had three children together.

After the birth of their second child, Adam, who had been diagnosed with Down syndrome prior to his birth, Beck returned with her husband and children to Utah to be closer to family and support. Expecting Adam: A True Story of Birth, Rebirth and Everyday Magic is Beck's story about her decision to give birth to and raise Adam.

In 1990, soon after the birth of her third child, Beck, as a part-time faculty member at BYU in Provo, Utah, taught a course on the sociology of gender in the Department of Social Science. During her time as part-time faculty member at BYU, five Mormon scholars were excommunicated from the LDS Church as a consequence of public writings that were deemed critical of the church; the group became known as the September Six. She and husband, John Beck, also made critical public statements about both the excommunications and other church and BYU matters, which led to first John, then Martha herself, leaving the LDS Church in 1993.

Since leaving the LDS Church, both Martha Beck and her now ex-husband subsequently came out publicly as gay. In 2003, Beck separated from her husband, divorcing him in 2004. She now lives with her family in Pennsylvania.

Leaving the Saints

See also: Satanic panic (Utah)

Beck's 2005 book Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith was controversial for accusations that she was sexually abused by her father, scholar and LDS Church apologist Hugh Nibley, as well as stating she recovered memories of the abuse. She writes that she had forgotten the abuse until later in her life when, in 1990, she recovered them. The veracity of recovered memories is disputed, and the American Psychological Association says "there is a consensus among memory researchers and clinicians that most people who were sexually abused as children remember all or part of what happened to them," though there is also agreement among most leaders in the field, "that although it is a rare occurrence, a memory of early childhood abuse that has been forgotten can be remembered later." The allegations have been denied by Beck's mother and seven siblings. The book prompted widespread reaction, much of it within the Mormon community, and an email campaign against the book's inclusion on Oprah Winfrey's website as well as in her magazine. In her book she writes "The peculiar details of my memories had at first made me doubt myself -- they were so weird -- but in the end, reinforced my conviction that I hadn't unconsciously made something up."

A New York Times article sums up with "Church members are also angry that Beck jokes about aspects of the Mormon faith; for example, she refers to the religious garments that Mormons wear in their temples as "holy long johns." But the main complaint about "Leaving the Saints" is that Beck has targeted one of the most admired of all the Latter-day Saints. "Books by apostates from the church, they come along all the time," Wotherspoon, of Sunstone Magazine, said. "But an attack on Hugh Nibley -- to call Hugh Nibley a pedophile and a liar, with no evidence to back it up -- of course that is going to hit the Mormon community like an earthquake."

Works

Books
Thesis
  • Beck, Martha Nibley (1994). Flight from the iron cage: LDS women's responses to the paradox of modernization (PhD). Harvard University. OCLC 32034090.

References

  1. ^ Beck, Martha N (2006). Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith. Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-0-307-33599-9.
  2. ^ Wyatt, Edward (February 24, 2005). "A Mormon Daughter's Book Stirs a Storm". The New York Times. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  3. ^ Martha Nibley Beck v. John Christen Beck, FC 2003-006435 Superior Court of Arizona Maricopa County (2003).
  4. Beck, Martha N (2001). Expecting Adam. Platkus Books. ISBN 978-0-7499-2190-3.
  5. Tanner, Jerald and Sandra (November 1993). "Mormon Inquisition? LDS Leaders Move To Repress Rebellion". Salt Lake Messenger. No. 85. Utah Lighthouse Ministry. Retrieved August 18, 2013.
  6. "Bio - Martha Beck". Martha Beck. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  7. ^ Reid, T. R. (May 8, 2005). "Daughter's Denunciation of Historian Roils Mormon Church". Washington Post. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  8. ^ News, Deseret (February 9, 2005). "Nibley siblings outraged over sister's book". Deseret News. Retrieved January 14, 2022. {{cite news}}: |last1= has generic name (help)

External links

Categories: