Title: The Book of Mormon Girl
Author: Joanna Brooks
Genre: Memoir
Year: 2012
Publisher: Free Press
Acquired: From the publisher for review consideration.
Rating:
Review: Joanna Brooks grew up believing she was special. As a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Brooks felt set apart from her peers (in a good way) during her childhood, where her parents emphasized love, faith and service.
It wasn’t until Brooks started college at Brigham Young University in the 1990s that she started to see a side of Mormonism she didn’t feel connected to — a church that excommunicated vocal Mormon feminists and a church willing to invest millions of dollars into a California campaign to restrict the rights of gays and lesbians to marry. The Book of Mormon Girl chronicles Brooks childhood in a faith she loved and subsequent struggle to find a way to live that faith despite her distance from its leadership during her adulthood.
Although Brooks writes lovingly and evocatively about her childhood as a Mormon girl, The Book of Mormon Girl really hit its stride for me when Brooks started to write about the rise of Mormon feminism in the 1990s and the subsequent fracturing of Brooks own connection with the Mormon Church. According to Brooks (which I add only because I don’t know anything about this issue other than what I read in this book), in 1992, Mormon feminist historian Lavina Fielding revealed the Strengthening the Members committee — a group organized by elders in the Mormon church to maintain files on members that were deemed critical of church leadership.