![]() Ortega’s specialty is his ability to contextualize Cooper’s soap-opera life within the raging currents of history. It is one of the most remarkable and unlikely narratives in the sprawling field of Scientology exposés. ![]() Club: “Before Tony Ortega’s The Unbreakable Miss Lovely, Cooper’s story had never been told in full. The details are worthy of John le Carre” – Jon Atack, author of A Piece of Blue Sky “A page-turner packed with barely believable facts. “A brilliant exposition of how a child who escaped the Nazis grew up to be hunted by the Church of Scientology” – BBC journalist John Sweeney It reveals the shocking details of the darkest chapter in Scientology’s checkered history, which ended with senior members in prison, and the organization’s reputation permanently damaged. The story of Paulette’s terrifying ordeal is told in full for the first time in The Unbreakable Miss Lovely, published by Silvertail Books in London. The onslaught, which lasted years, drove her to the brink of suicide. ![]() ![]() Desperate to shut the book down, Scientology unleashed on her one of the most sinister personal campaigns the free world has ever known. In 1971 Paulette Cooper wrote a scathing book about the Church of Scientology. ![]()
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