Edward Snowden was born in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, and grew up in the shadow of Fort Meade. A systems engineer by training, he served as an officer of the Central Intelligence Agency, and worked as a contractor for the National Security Agency. He has received numerous awards for his public service, including the Right Livelihood Award, the German Whistleblower Prize, the Ridenhour Prize for Truth-Telling, and the Carl von Ossietzky Medal from the International League of Human Rights. Currently, he serves as president of the board of directors of the Freedom of the Press Foundation.
"A riveting account... Reads like a literary thriller... Snowden
pushes the reader to reflect more seriously on what every American
should be asking already."
--The New York Times "Gripping... Snowden demonstrates a knack for
explaining in lucid and compelling language the inner workings of
[CIA and NSA] systems and the menace he came to believe they
posed."
--The Washington Post "Snowden eventually decided his loyalties lay
not with the agencies he was working for, but the public they were
set up to protect. He felt ordinary citizens were being betrayed,
and he had a duty to explain how.... His account of the experiences
that led him to take momentous decisions, along with the details he
gives of his family background, serve as a robust defense against
accusations that he is a traitor."
--The Guardian "Even for those of us who've followed the Snowden
revelations closely, Permanent Record is full of surprises.... A
deeply reluctant whistleblower, Snowden also emerges as a
peculiarly American patriot, with roots that go back to Plymouth
Rock.... As his memoir makes clear, all the techniques he exposed
in 2013 remain in place."
--The Nation
"Well-written... Snowden's descriptions of the real impact of the
various surveillance systems he disclosed--stripped of abstract
concepts and technical jargon--are some of the most disturbing
parts of the book.... Offers a useful reminder of the god-like
omniscience that digital data can bestow on those with the power to
collect it all."
--The Economist "Snowden's book is straightforward, admirably
so.... Having gazed through the windows of the panopticon, he
experienced that rarity, a moment of vision: The world must be told
these things I know. Against absurd odds, he delivered his
knowledge to us."
--The New York Review of Books "An extraordinary book... A riveting
blend of spycraft as Snowden painstakingly figures out how to
confirm his suspicions without tipping off his bosses, and a
brilliant ethical treatise as Snowden reveals the reasoning that
took him from each step to the next... The best proof yet that
Snowden is exactly what he appears to be: a gung-ho guy from a
military family who believes deeply in service and the values
embodied by the US constitution, who explored multiple avenues of
squaring his oath to uphold those values with the corrupt and
illegal practices he saw around him, and worked out a
breathtakingly bold and ambitious plan to do what no one else had
ever managed: to expose wrongdoing in a way that provoked sustained
interest and sparked action."
--BoingBoing
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