Wolverine Books
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Books » World War II » Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization  
Categories
Books
DVDs
Music
Magazines
VHS
Food
Jewelry
Apparel
Sporting Goods
Outdoor
Subcategories
Asia
Eastern Front
Europe
Hiroshima & Nagasaki
Home Front
Intelligence Operations
Iwo Jima
Naval
Normandy
Pearl Harbor
Personal Narratives
Stalingrad
Western Front
Women

BlogRoll

Travel With Books

Related Categories
• World War II
Military
History
Subjects
Books
• 20th Century
World
History
Subjects
Books
• Political History
Political Science
Social Sciences
Nonfiction
Subjects
• History: World: General
General
Archive
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• History: Military: World War II: General
General
Archive
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• Hardcover
Format (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Binding (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books

Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization

Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization
Author: Nicholson Baker
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Category: Book

List Price: $30.00
Buy New: $17.24
You Save: $12.76 (43%)



New (40) Used (8) from $15.90

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
Sales Rank: 1868

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 576
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.2 x 1.6

ISBN: 1416567844
Dewey Decimal Number: 940.5311
EAN: 9781416567844
ASIN: 1416567844

Publication Date: March 11, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new, perfect condition.

Also Available In:

  • Audio CD - Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization
  • Audio CD - Human Smoke (Library Edition): The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization
  • Audio CD - Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization
  • Kindle Edition - Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization

Similar Items:

  • Retribution: The Battle for Japan, 1944-45
  • Lush Life: A Novel
  • This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War
  • The Age of American Unreason
  • Worlds at War: The 2,500-Year Struggle Between East and West

Editorial Reviews:

Book Description
Bestselling author Nicholson Baker, recognized as one of the most dexterous and talented writers in America today, has created a compelling work of nonfiction bound to provoke discussion and controversy -- a wide-ranging, astonishingly fresh perspective on the political and social landscape that gave rise to World War II.

Human Smoke delivers a closely textured, deeply moving indictment of the treasured myths that have romanticized much of the 1930s and '40s. Incorporating meticulous research and well-documented sources -- including newspaper and magazine articles, radio speeches, memoirs, and diaries -- the book juxtaposes hundreds of interrelated moments of decision, brutality, suffering, and mercy. Vivid glimpses of political leaders and their dissenters illuminate and examine the gradual, horrifying advance toward overt global war and Holocaust.

Praised by critics and readers alike for his exquisitely observant eye and deft, inimitable prose, Baker has assembled a narrative within Human Smoke that unfolds gracefully, tragically, and persuasively. This is an unforgettable book that makes a profound impact on our perceptions of historical events and mourns the unthinkable loss humanity has borne at its own hand.

Questions for Nicholson Baker

Amazon.com: This is obviously a big departure for you, in both style and subject. How did the project come about, and how did it find this form?

Baker: I was writing a different book, on a smaller historical subject, when I stopped and asked: Do I understand World War Two? And of course I didn't. Also I'd been reading newspapers from the thirties and forties, and I knew that there were startling things in them.

In earlier books, I've looked closely at moments to see why they matter, and I've tried to rescue things, people, ideas from overfamiliarity. So in a way a book like this--which moves a loupe over some incidents along the way to a much-chronicled war--was a natural topic.

But yes, the style is a departure: it's very simple here out of respect for the hellishness of the story that I'm trying to assemble, piece by piece.

Amazon.com: Why World War Two in particular?

Baker: Politicians constantly fondle a small, clean, paperweight version of this war, as if it provides them with moral clarity. We know that it was the most destructive five year period in history. It was destructive of human lives, and also of shelter, sleep, warmth, gentleness, mercy, political refuge, rational discussion, legal process, civil tradition, and public truth. Millions of people were gassed, shot, starved, and worked to death by a paranoid fanatic. The war's victims felt as if they'd come to the end of civilization.

But then we also say that because it turned out so badly, it was the one just, necessary war. We acknowledge that it was the worst catastrophe in the history of humanity--and yet it was "the good war." The Greatest Generation fought it, and a generation of people was wiped out.

If we don't try to understand this one war better--understand it not in the sense of coming up with elaborate mechanistic theories of causation, but understand it in the humbler sense of feeling our way through its enormity--then cartoon versions of what happened will continue to distort debates about the merits of all future wars.

Amazon.com: You largely kept your own opinions out of the text, except for the choices you made in what to include and a few editorial comments here and there, as well as your short Afterword at the end. It makes for a real tension between the neutral tone and the sense, at least on the part of this reader, that there are some passionate opinions behind it. What authorial role did you want to establish?

Baker: I found that my own cries of grief, amazement, or outrage--or of admiration at some quiet heroism--took away from the chaos of individual decisions that move events forward.

It helps sometimes to look at an action--compassionate, murderous, confessional, obfuscatory--out of context: as something that somebody did one day. The one-day-ness of history is often lost in traditional histories, because paragraphs and sections are organized by theme: attack, counterattack, argument, counterargument. That's a reasonable way to proceed, but I rejected it here for several reasons. First, because it fails to convey the hugeness and confusion of the time as it was experienced by people who lived through it. And, second, because I wanted the reader to have to form, and then jettison, and then re-form, explanations and mini-narratives along the way--as I did, and as did a newspaper reader in, say, New York City in September, 1941.

I think the pared-down, episodic style allowed me to offer some moments of truth that I wouldn't have been able to offer had I had uppermost in my mind the necessity of making transitions and smoothing out inconsistencies and sounding like me. I offer no organized argument: I want above all to fill the readers mind with an anguished sense of what happened.

Amazon.com: I was telling someone about your book and how it failed to convince me of what I took to be its thesis, and his response was, "Wow, you really made me want to read it." And that's my response too: if your point was to convince me that we shouldn't have fought World War II, then the book didn't work, but I'm still very glad I read it. But maybe that wasn't your point at all.

Baker: I'm really pleased that you responded that way. I didn't want to convince, but only to add enriching complication. Long ago I wrote an essay called "Changes of Mind" in which I tried to talk about how gradual and complicated a shift of conviction can be. I left overt opinionizing out of this book so that a reader can draw his or her own conclusions, folding in other knowledge.

There are many books about the war that I value highly even though I don't agree with the world-outlook of the people who wrote them. To take a major example: Churchill's own memoir-history is completely fascinating and revealing--and a great pleasure to read--although I happen to think that Churchill was himself a bad war leader.

There's no point in trying to use a book to replace one simple set of beliefs about World War Two with another simple set of beliefs. The war years are alive with contradictions and puzzles and shake-your-head-in-wonder moments. You're going to look at it in different ways on different days because you're going to have different moments uppermost in your mind.

On the other hand, I don't want to hide what I think. Here's what I am, more or less: I'm a non-religious pacifist who is sympathetic to Quaker notions of nonviolent resistance and of refuge and aid for those who need help. I find appealing what Christopher Isherwood called "the plain moral stand against killing." I don't expect people to look at things this way, necessarily--after all, it took me a while to get there myself. But I do hope that my book will offer some thought-provocations that anyone, of any ideological persuasion, will want to mull over.

Amazon.com: It's hard to believe there's something new to say about what may be the most written-about event in human history. What did you feel about approaching such a well-chronicled subject? What were you most surprised to find? What responses have you gotten from historians and other readers?

Baker: There were many surprises. For instance, I didn't expect Herbert Hoover, who argued for the lifting of the British blockade in order to get food to Jews in Polish ghettoes and French concentration camps, to be a voice of reason and compassion. I didn't know that German propagandists used the phrase "iron curtain" before Churchill did. I didn't know that in 1940 the Royal Air Force tried to set fire to the forests of Germany. I didn't know how interested the United States government was in arming China. I didn't know how public was Japan's unhappiness with the American oil embargo. I didn't know that many of the people who worked hardest to help Jews escape Hitler were pacifists, not interventionists.

I've had interesting reactions from historians, who seem to understand (for the most part) that I'm not trying to write a comprehensive history of the beginnings of the war. I've had some very good reviews and some very bad ones. The bad ones seem to follow the teeter-totter school: that if a dictator and the nation he controls is evil, then the leader of the nation who opposes the evil dictator must be good. Life isn't that way, of course. There is in fact no "moral equivalence" created by examining coterminous violent and repulsive acts. The notion of moral equivalence is a mistake, because it undermines our notions of personal responsibility and law. Each act of killing is its own act, not something to be heaped like produce on a balancing scale. One person, as Roosevelt said, must not be punished for the deed of another--though he didn't follow his own precept.

Gandhi comes up sometimes. It was said in a review that I "adore" Gandhi. That's not quite right. Gandhi is in many ways an admirable and perceptive man. He spoke gently even while thousands of his supporters were in jail and his country was being bombed by an occupying power. But the years told on him, and he sometimes came to sound, as Nehru once observed in a memoir, cold--indifferent to suffering. He is one voice, and a voice worth listening to.

My real heroes, though, are people like Victor Klemperer, who responded to Hitlerian terror not with counterviolence, but with beautiful nonresistance: by writing a masterpiece of a diary. He and Romanian diarist Mihael Sebastian have the last word for that reason. And I've dedicated the book to British and American pacifists--I want this book to rescue the memory of their loving, troubled efforts to help.

The most interesting and helpful set of responses to the book so far has been at www.edrants.com, where a group of participants discussed Human Smoke for a week, adding all kinds of thoughts, analogies, comparisons, and criticisms. I've never been through anything like it before, and I'm the better for it.

Amazon.com: Your recent celebration of Wikipedia in the New York Review of Books has gotten a lot of attention (deservedly so). Did the style and philosophy of Wikipedia influence the way you wrote Human Smoke? Have you made any Wikipedia updates based on what you found in your research.

Baker: I used Wikipedia during the writing of the book, especially to check facts about subtypes of airplanes and ships--e.g., the Bristol Beaufighter I cited in the first paragraph of the review. Wikipedia is amazingly strong and precise on military hardware. (And on when a British Lord became a Viscount, and on a million other things.) But I've been writing movies, and the model I often had in my mind while working on Human Smoke was the movie documentary--in which short scenes and clips follow each other with a minimum of narration.



Product Description
Bestselling author Nicholson Baker, recognized as one of the most dexterous and talented writers in America today, has created a compelling work of nonfiction bound to provoke discussion and controversy -- a wide-ranging, astonishingly fresh perspective on the political and social landscape that gave rise to World War II.

Human Smoke delivers a closely textured, deeply moving indictment of the treasured myths that have romanticized much of the 1930s and '40s. Incorporating meticulous research and well-documented sources -- including newspaper and magazine articles, radio speeches, memoirs, and diaries -- the book juxtaposes hundreds of interrelated moments of decision, brutality, suffering, and mercy. Vivid glimpses of political leaders and their dissenters illuminate and examine the gradual, horrifying advance toward overt global war and Holocaust.

Praised by critics and readers alike for his exquisitely observant eye and deft, inimitable prose, Baker has assembled a narrative within Human Smoke that unfolds gracefully, tragically, and persuasively. This is an unforgettable book that makes a profound impact on our perceptions of historical events and mourns the unthinkable loss humanity has borne at its own hand.


Customer Reviews:   Read 31 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A better book to read...   May 15, 2008
I give it five stars for its THESIS, but it is sloppy with the facts. The THESIS that World War Two was just as pointless and self-defeating as Iraq. A more accurate account with the same THESIS is:

Churchill, Hitler And The Unnecessary War, by Patrick Buchanan.



5 out of 5 stars Worth reading   May 14, 2008
I was born at the end of WWII, so I grew up hearing a lot about the war. Most of the info in this book was new to me and I'm sure it will be to other people. Very well written and easy to read except for having to absorb all the misery and death. Reminds us that war should always be the very last resort.


3 out of 5 stars Scrapbook Polemic   May 10, 2008
First of all, I agree with the point of view that war is the most horrendous, not to say bizarre, human activity and that as time goes on it is getting worse not better, more bestial. Apart from some differences in technology, our war making most resembles war making in the insect world. So I think it's simply normal to hate war, especially as conducted now: against civilians, indifferently, as if you were playing a video game.

Having said that, I found this book, which is pacifist in intent, pretty annoying. By joining together news clippings and descriptions of minor events in a chronological order with brief commentary, he builds his case by implication, rather than just stating it. I suppose this would be all right. I don't dispute the facts nor the obvious inferences, but obviously if you just went through every newspaper and picked out the items that fit your "agenda", you could build a case that World War II never happened at all.

The fact that Roosevelt and Churchill were looking for a way to get the U.S. involved in the war regardless of how many innocent lives were lost is I guess incontestable. Churchill not warning the people of Coventry that a huge attack was expected is unforgivable. There's a lot that reflects badly on Churchill. It needs to be remembered that his rhetorical magic helped a great many miserable people get through miserable times, insubstantial as rhetoric is and this is because it was pugnacious and aggressive. If someone attacks you or your family, your instinct is to fight back. The extensive quotes from Gandhi that generally suggest that you should lie down and let them trample you come across as naive, at best. Anyway, it wasn't going to happen. There's going to have to be a fundamental change in human beings, not simply political - policy changes if war is going to end. And I don't think it's impossible, I just think it's highly improbable. Our country's mythology and the historical mythologies of most countries is based on winning wars, defeating evil, and, as I say, our natural instinct is: if pushed to push back.

Personally, I don't think the leaders were or are as responsible for what they do as is generally thought. After all, Hitler and Stalin were insane, Churchill was drunk all the time. It seems to me that all these people were swept along by the cyclone of events and all the victims swept along too.

I think it's good that the view of World War II is being revised. All the triumphalism needs to be muted and the deplorable nature of these events needs to be confronted, as much as we can at this distance. The fire bombing of Germany was no more to be celebrated than the bombing of Rotterdam or London or Stalingrad were. Let's not think modern warfare represents a positive evolution, it only shows us that the end is near.

Anyway, this is obviously a provocative book, and I think you should read it if you're interested in the run-up to World War II, but read other books on the subject too. You need to develop a historical context. As an example, all the items about the United States' attempts to build a Chinese air force so that it could bomb Japan make it seem as though Japan was unjustly provoked. I don't recall that he even mentioned the "Rape of Nanking".



5 out of 5 stars A Brave, If Irritating, Work   May 7, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I am a tremendous fan of Nicholson Baker. I find him to be one of the best prose stylists in America today. I find his work to be eminently readable--absorbing, subtly subversive, sometimes irritating, certainly entertaining. Even when I disagree with him, whether that be the conclusions he draws in his non-fiction or some outrageousness in his fiction, I love to read him.

Human Smoke joins Baker's oeuvre as one of his best pieces of non-fiction. In it, he gives us a different perspective on the lead-up and first years of World War II. Essentially, it is his desire to show us how the Allies, Churchill and Roosevelt, in particular, brought on the war, committed atrocities and enabled the Nazis and Japanese to commit their atrocities. For example, the British engaged in haphazard bombing in Europe forcing the Luftwaffe to start the Battle of Britain while Roosevelt gave the Chinese planes and crews and positioned the Pacific fleet to egg on the Japanese, knowing in advance Pearl Harbor would be attacked, drawing us into the war just as he wished.

In point of fact, almost no one in this book comes off well. The pacifists look rather pathetic as they are dragged off to jail while Gandhi encourages people to stand and be slaughtered rather than defend themselves. Jews and non-Jews alike seem in denial about what is going on in Nazi-controlled territories. The only people who come off half-way decent are ones you wouldn't expect: people like Herbert Hoover who works to relieve the suffering of children in Europe, and Hitler who constantly seems to be pushing for peace treaties, responding to provocation and pushing Jews to emigrate.

Now, though much of what Baker is reporting is true, he is, of course, rather selective in his reporting. And I didn't walk away from this book changing my feelings about Churchill, Roosevelt, or Hitler, for that matter. Much of what Baker talks about in this book are things with which I was already familiar. Still, it is good to be reminded of the fact that in big historical events like this, there is always more going on than meets the eye. Politicians, no matter how decent, are playing deep, complex games that even they can probably not fully articulate.

And when it comes right down to it, Baker writes so well. I love the structure of this book. It reads and in some ways appears on the page as a series of telegrams. Each "message" is dated and comes across as pure reportage based, as it is, on sources from the time. As we all know, primary sources such as newspapers and letters can be as deceiving and self-serving as any other form of media but it still makes for wonderful reading.

Baker takes a series risk with this book. The Allies in World War II were the "Greatest Generation" and taking them to task does not seem like a wise road to popularity. On the other hand, those people not automatically turned off by Baker's premise will find a lot of interest here. My respect for people is rarely swayed by knowing that they are flawed, human, and products of their time. If you are the same, I recommend this book to you.



5 out of 5 stars An incredible and inciteful look at important history.   May 5, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This telling of the story of the buildup to our involvement in World War Two is unique and opens up the mind to an understanding of the men and ideas behind World War II. It also reveals the utter hypocrisy that underlies most wars. There were no good guys. Just the bad guys fighting each other. As one historian has put it, "World War Two was a lie versus a half truth", and I think he was being generous. Most importantly, it did not have to happen. This book is a must. I've dog eared and written so many notes in mine I need to buy another one to loan out.

Powered by Associate-O-Matic

Contact Wolverine Books