Nicholson Baker is the author of ten novels and six works of nonfiction, including The Anthologist, The Mezzanine, and Human Smoke. He has won a National Book Critics Circle Award, a Hermann Hesse Prize, a Guggenheim fellowship, and a Katherine Anne Porter Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He lives in Maine with his wife, Margaret Brentano.
“But what are chemical weapons and canine cuteness doing together
in the same book? The more we hear about Baker’s journeys in
government archives and about Cedric and Briney, the clearer it
becomes that Baker isn’t just writing about cold war history and
transparency. He’s also implicitly posing a set of intertwined
questions about life and art: How are we to conceptualize the
coexistence of the secrecy-shrouded horrors of modern war with all
of our world’s little delights? Can writing help us feel our way
toward some answers? . . . Every time Baker swerves from
government-funded, classification-shrouded dreams of mass infection
to his dogs, he creates a visceral reminder of what should be
obvious: that all these phenomena exist in the same world. Our
world. This modest-sounding payoff is actually quite startling in
practice; again and again, reading Baseless, it hit me like a
little electric jolt. This is about more than pointing toward
wrongs: there’s a suggestion, too, that we often file these
wrongs—and our longstanding uncertainty about them—in the incorrect
psycho-cultural boxes, where they become impossible to truly
process.” —New York Review of Books
“The book follows a circadian rhythm of file requests, denials,
archive visits and attempts at dot-connecting, punctuated by dog
walks and Baker’s puttering around his Maine home. That
structure gives the book a sweetly personal feel; no book about
FOIA may be more accessible to a layperson.” —The Washington
Post
“Written with bemused fascination and occasional outrage . . . this
lucid yet freewheeling narrative unearths much queasy detail about
biological weapons and their promoters. The result is a colorful,
engrossing recreation of a sinister history—and a convincing case
for opening government archives to public scrutiny.” —Publishers
Weekly
“Engaging, bracing, and moving new book . . . Ultimately, what is
so compelling about Baseless is not the prosecutorial brief. It’s
watching Baker, a thoughtful, sensitive, and vividly expressive
soul, grapple with the pathological secrecy of his own government
and with the heinousness of what he suspects it has done.” —The New
Republic
“Gripping . . . This flowing account reveals the dark side of
wartime strategies clouded by denials of FOIA requests. It will
fascinate Cold War-era historians and readers concerned about
access to government information.” —Library Journal
“Staggeringly good.” —Counterpunch
“Nicholson, a prolific writer and determined pacifist, offers a
double thriller of sorts, artfully weaving together two distinct
stories . . . Baker is an engaging writer, and Baseless is a
gripping book.” —American Scholar
“The leading villains in Baker’s saga, which he aptly describes as
‘a sort of case study, or diary, or daily meditation, on the
pathology of government secrecy,’ are the Air Force, Army, and CIA,
and his disclosures are rarely banal but rather consistently
provocative and disturbing. Using both direct and circumstantial
evidence, the author suggests that illegal weapons have been used
against North Korea and perhaps against so-called enemy forces in
other nations. Readers should be impressed by Baker’s persistence,
and most will end up charmed, however obliquely, by his
obsessions.” —Kirkus Reviews
“The synchronicity is extraordinary, almost chilling: Nicholson
Baker’s gripping diary of his endless attempts to ferret out facts
relating to the Pentagon’s top-secret biological weapons programs
is published while the whole world is suddenly upended and aghast
amid a lethal biological attack of an apparently natural origin. I
say apparently natural for as every page of this book is peppered
with tales of bizarre weapons—infected feathers, for God’s sake!
plague-saturated voles!—you come away doubting everything the US
government ever says. And yet, through it all, Baker tells us with
a meticulous diarist’s calm about his dogs and the Maine
countryside and the birdsong, and you feel, in the end, everything
will be alright, and germ-free.” —Simon Winchester, author of The
Man Who Loved China and The Professor and the Madman
“A luminous meditation on the power of secrets and mysteries. Baker
shows us the ways in which a government shielded by a bodyguard of
lies threatens the foundations of democracy.” —Tim Weiner, Pulitzer
Prize-winning author of Legacy Of Ashes and The Folly and the
Glory
“One of America's most brilliantly creative writers navigates the
mirrored labyrinth of government secrecy with a combination of
astonishment and rage. Along the way, he discovers an array
of long-hidden terrors while balancing the joys of daily life
against the dread that envelops all who confront the reality of
covert power.” —Stephen Kinzer, author of Poisoner in Chief: Sidney
Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control
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