Barry Meier is a former New York Times reporter and a member of the Times' team that won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting. He is also a two-time winner of the prestigious George Polk Award for Investigative Reporting and other professional honors. Prior to joining the Times in 1989, he worked for the Wall Street Journal and New York Newsday. He is also the author of Pain Killer and Missing Man. Meier lives in New York City.
Praise for Pain Killer: "Groundbreaking . . . Barry Meier's Pain
Killer is the shocking account of the origins of today's opioid
epidemic, the creators of this plague, and the way to help stop
it."
- Sam Quinones, author of Dreamland: The True Tale of America's
Opiate Epidemic
"Prescient . . . a landmark work of investigative journalism." -
David A. Kessler, former commissioner of the Food and Drug
Administration and author of The End of Overeating
Praise for Missing Man:
"Meier's fascinating cat-and-mouse tale about government cover-ups,
bungled investigations and the Levinson family's anguished pursuit
of the truth is straight out of a Homeland episode." - People
"Constructed as a nonfiction thriller, Missing Man is at its core a
tragedy, Death of a Salesman in the Persian Gulf." - Time
"....Meier adds color and depth to the political saga....an
illuminating look at a shadowy industry." - Publishers Weekly
"An adroitly handled, disturbing exposé, clearly relevant to
discussions of the tactics of Trump and company....The labyrinthine
narrative reveals a slick, high-stakes dark side to the
proliferation of private intelligence firms via such flashpoints as
the "Steele dossier" on Donald Trump and the "sleazy tactics"
employed by Israeli firm Black Cube on behalf of Harvey Weinstein.
Decrying "the oversized impact" of these private spies, the author
circles back to a grim secret: 'the big money is made not by
exposing the truth but by papering it over or concealing it.'" -
Kirkus Reviews
"Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Barry Meier delves
into the pervasive, billion-dollar private spy industry in Spooked.
. . . Meier is a lively guide to this dark and dangerous world." -
Tatler (UK), The 10 Best Books to Read in Spring 2021
"[Meier] has said what hardly anyone else in his circle of elite
mainstream journalists has had the courage to say." - Wall Street
Journal
"Spooked: The Trump Dossier, Black Cube, and the Rise of Private
Spies contains a comprehensive, page-turning narrative of the
massive media and political dumpster fire that was the Steele
dossier. . . . It's a public service to have the rise and fall of
the dossier documented so thoroughly in one place by an author who
cannot be dismissed. The essentials are all there and then some,
advancing the ball with colorful new details. . . . Regardless of
your political perspective . . . [this] book is well worth a read."
- Jason Foster, The Federalist
"Shines a light on the recent newsmakers in private espionage." -
New York Post
"The first mainstream press figure to break the industry omerta
over the reporting failures of Russiagate. . . . a particularly
entertaining read for anyone who's ever worked in a newsroom." -
Matt Taibbi
"A lively and readable examination of some of the mischief wrought
by the business of private spies." - New York magazine
"Spooked is a . . . fascinating account of just how far the modern
surveillance state has leeched in the private sector--and into
private lives." - Jonny Diamond, Literary Hub Editor-in-Chief
"A truly alarming glimpse into how the information market has
become turbo-charged by dark money, loose morals and oligarchic
feuds. I would highly recommend reading it." - Oliver Bullough,
author of Moneyland
"Filled with eye-popping revelations." - Bradley Hope, coauthor of
Billion Dollar Whale
"Meier's book compiles and synthesizes several stories about recent
private intelligence misadventures. . . . [his] research and
original interviews flesh out the stories and characters involved."
- New Republic
"Spooked reads like the best kind of spy story: a gripping tale
packed with twists and turns, uncovering a secret side of our
modern world." - Waterstones
"Meier is a Pulitzer-winning former New York Times reporter, and he
stirs an incredible amount of well-researched material into this
book . . . a mad whirl of double-cross, Machiavellian machinations
and, of course, money." - Darragh McManus, Irish Independent
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