In light of Errol Morris' underwhelming Netflix documentary, CHAOS: THE MANSON MURDERS, I feel compelled to recommend a half-dozen books that explore the Manson Mythos with greater flair and originality than Morris manages to dredge up in his scant ninety-six minute film. I've presented the books here in reverse-chronological order...
1. DENNIS WILSON AND CHARLIE MANSON by Jack Skelley (Fred & Barney Press, 2021). From the author of the legendary underground novel FEAR OF KATHY ACKER comes this fascinating chapbook that explores how a random encounter between Beach Boys musician Dennis Wilson and ex-con reprobate Charlie Manson sets into motion a series of tragic events that lead to an infamous Hollywood killing spree and the death of the entire 1960s. Based on documented research, this peculiar psychodrama weaves in passages of Skelley's psychedelic verse, the centerpiece of which is "Rise," an apocalyptic sermon told from the point of view of Manson himself.
2. WIDOW OF THE AMPUTATION & OTHER WEIRD CRIMES by Robert Guffey (Eraserhead Press, 2021). Yes, indeed, I've humbly included my own book on the list! The title story of this Wonderland Award-nominated collection of four novellas is an experimental supernatural horror story that combines historical settings with touches of absurdist humor to create a character study of a psychopathic outsider manipulated by forces he can never hope to understand. The narrative involves Charles Manson kidnapping the severed head of Mary Magdalene and follows his subsequent descent into the Land of the Dead located just beneath Devil’s Hole in Death Valley, California. Over the course of this condensed epic we witness a most unusual prison break in which Manson succeeds in busting out of Corcoran Penitentiary thanks to fifty-one photographs of the Death Valley sky hanging on the cracked walls of his Maximum Security cell, the theft of Mary Magdalene’s severed head by sentient spiders made of twine, the bloody murder of the storytelling coyotes of Badwater, California, the ritual sacrifice of two astronauts on the surface of the moon, a midair pursuit involving two talking ravens from Norse mythology, and Manson’s aforementioned climactic expedition into the subterranean kingdom of Mictlan, Lord of the Dead. The mythologies of various cultures (Mayan, Norse, Hopi Indian, Christian, and others) collide in this on-the-road pilgrimage involving gods, demigods, animal familiars, and all-too-human madmen.
3. CHAOS: CHARLES MANSON, THE CIA, AND THE SECRET HISTORY OF THE SIXTIES by Tom O'Neill and Dan Piepenbring (Back Bay Books, 2019). This is the source material upon which Errol Morris' Netflix documentary is ostensibly based. Unlike the film, however, O'Neill and Piepenbring's 521-page book includes a plethora of compelling evidence pointing toward the disturbing notion that Manson's California misadventures were being actively subsidized and supported by Friends in High Places, including MK-Ultra scientist Louis Jolyon West. This books adds an impressive amount of evidence to a theory first proposed by Mae Brussell (known to some as the "Queen of Conspiracies") way back in 1971 when the Manson Family trial was still unfolding. See this previous CryptoPost for more information about both Brussell and Manson.
4. THE SHADOW OVER SANTA SUSANA: BLACK MAGIC, MIND CONTROL, AND THE MANSON FAMILY MYTHOS by Adam Gorightly (Creation Books, 2009). Before the 2019 publication of CHAOS, there were only two essential Charles Manson books, and Adam Gorightly's THE SHADOW OVER SANTA SUSANA was one of them. You can't really get a full picture of what went down on Cielo Drive in August of 1969 without reading Ed Sanders' THE FAMILY, Gorightly's THE SHADOW OVER SANTA SUSANA, and O'Neill and Piepenbring's CHAOS (in that order). A standout chapter in Gorightly's book is "Rosemary's Baby," which covers previously obscure information regarding the late 1960s Hollywood milieu Rosemary LaBianca and her husband were orbiting just prior to their murders.
5. COLUMBO: THE HELTER SKELTER MURDERS by William Harrington (Forge Books, 1994). When I visited the Museum of Death in Los Angeles during the summer of 2019, I was surprised to discover William Harrington's second Columbo novel (the first one, THE GRASSY KNOLL, focused on the JFK assassination) featured prominently in the Charles Manson room among a small selection of Manson-Family-related nonfiction volumes. In this media tie-in mystery novel, Lt. Columbo finds himself coming face-to-face with Charlie himself after discovering the slogans "HEALTER SKELTER, "POLITICAL PIGGY," and "ALL PIGGYS DIE! DIE! WHO NEXT?" scrawled in blood at a violent crime scene revolving around the murder of a rich L.A. department store owner, Arlene Khoury, and her lover, Steve Heck. Not only do we learn that Columbo testified at the Manson trial, but Charlie was so familiar with the rumpled detective that he even dreamed up a special nickname for him ("Cisco"). About halfway through the novel, Columbo interviews Charlie in Folsom Prison during which the convicted murderer sings the detective a little song:
"Always wanted to be an apostle.
Always knew I'd make it if I tried.
Now I'm gonna retire and write a gospel,
So people will remember when we've die-ied."
One wonders what Peter Falk (the Emmy Award-winning actor who portrayed Lt. Columbo over a period of thirty-five years) made of this novel's salacious plot, particularly since Manson once gave a gossipy interview to a mid-1970s tabloid called THE HOLLYWOOD STAR in which he claimed that Falk himself partied with his harem of girls back during the Family's SoCal heyday. Other Hollywood luminaries named in that particular interview included Yul Brynner, Neil Diamond, Jane Fonda, Elvis Presley, Peter Sellers, and Nancy Sinatra.
6. THE FAMILY: THE STORY OF CHARLES MANSON'S DUNE BUGGY ATTACK BATTALION by Ed Sanders (E.P. Dutton, 1971). Ed Sanders, longtime member of The Fugs, began investigating the Manson Family only a few months after the Tate/LaBianca murders went down in August of 1969. As a lifelong lyricist, Sanders wrote his notes in verse and began referring to himself as "an investigative poet." Over the course of his two-year-long odyssey, Sanders tracked down various Manson-related occult societies and criminal gangs based in Los Angeles, including all the material witnesses to the murders themselves. Sanders' investigation inspired a slew of conspiratorial and parapolitical texts that followed, but it's always illuminating to go back to the original. I recommend tracking down the first hardcover edition (pictured above), since subsequent versions were censored as a result of a defamation lawsuit brought against the publisher by the Process Church of the Final Judgement.