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

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ISBN: 1416567844 - Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization  
Title:Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization
Author:Nicholson Baker
Publisher:Simon & Schuster
Type:Book / Hardcover
Publication Date:11 March, 2008
ISBN / ISBN-13:1416567844  /  9781416567844
List Price:$30.00
You Save:$10.20
Amazon Price:$19.80

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Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:

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.

Amazon.com Review
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.



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Customer Reviews:

 • There Is Much To Learn From This Book
27 October, 2008

Let me start out by saying I am not a pacifist, have heretofore been unimpressed by Nicholson Baker's fiction, and that based on what I heard via word of mouth, I absolutely expected to loathe this controversial book. Instead I was very much surprised by it. Giving in very little to what Stephen King aptly terms "author intrusion" and instead allowing the figures from the pre-Second World War to speak for themselves and the too often atrocious acts of violence endemic in the era to sickeningly add to that, Baker provides a 566-page history lesson that is difficult to intelligently dismiss. Dealing largely with the time between the Great War and its sequel, the period that stood as a sort of mishandled entr'acte, Human Smoke makes its case of missed opportunity and human brutality with several thousand brief, hard-hitting vignettes, most of them ominously concluding with a cited date that sees history crawl ever closer to the maelstrom of the 1940's war. (Baker's line near the book's end pointing out that on December 31, 1941 most people who would die in the Second World War were still alive particularly rings tragically loud, and should give a reader pause.) What Baker got right was his research into events that constitute the seldom-told and rarely known history of the period "between the wars" which was itself a violent time of many minor wars and suppressions of colonized peoples (complete with chemical and biological offensives and firebombings of civilian populaces) all underscored by one missed opportunity after another to de-rail the high-speed rush toward global conflict. Baker also draws many unstated parallels to our world today, fully using history in its most important role as would-be master teacher. In route to the conclusion of his tragedy, Baker cites fascinating minutia found nowhere else: Hitler's pride in the blondeness of his underarm hair, Churchill's imperialistic bloodlust and his admiration for Mussolini, the fact that in his youth Rudolph Hess greatly resembled Clark Gable, Franklin Roosevelt's lifelong anti-Semitism. What Baker didn't get so right was his lack of acceptance of the fact that at times war, even a war that need not have been, is the path of lesser evil, and that when faced with a choice between submission to tyranny or self defense, the latter option is the only sane course to take. Also Baker's emphasis on the role of the United States as undue instigator of the Japanese aggression at Pearl Harbor began to irritate me very much. While again and again Baker cited American actions in the 1930's that met with Japanese disapproval, he seems to forget that by his own recounting the Japanese were by then already brutally at war, and that the island nation regarded eastern Asia and the Pacific rim as much rightfully its own as Americans of the previous century had looked on expansion to the shores of California as their manifest destiny. In short, while the Japanese may have been angered by US backing of China and US a military presence in the Pacific, this alone did not compel Japanese militarism, which was already in evidence. Many might also be surprised not only by Baker's negative take on such revered World War Two icons as Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt, but by the very statements these men made, in their own words, in their own speeches and books. How Baker can be so often criticized for his iconoclasm when he is merely using these figures' own expressed statements defies logic. Baker brings a cast of literally thousands into Human Smoke as he describes the actions and attitudes not only of the figures most familiar to us, but also of men and women who are virtually unknown today. Baker revisits the words of rabbis, pacifists, philosophers, warriors, politicians, newspaper reporters, researchers, priests, college professors and many others from diverging walks of life, and allows them their say in this present century, and as such it is difficult to argue against the facts as he presents them in this chronicle of a march toward tragedy. Is Baker ultimately right in his criticism of the human conduct which caused the Second World War? I found he made valid points and joined with him in wishing wiser avenues had been taken, but unlike Baker I find that firstly I am in no place to criticize those leaders and everyday souls who provided us the post-Second World War society in which we placidly dwell, and secondly, I pessimistically indict humanity's "smallness" its xenophobia and nationalism, love of war, greed, and violent longings, and state for the record that I don't think the mass of men are capable of the courageously peaceful dignity Baker seems to suggest should have been in evidence in the 1920's and 1930's, which would have derailed the hectic rush to violence. Simply put, human beings are beasts at heart and I doubt we'll ever change, so to criticize us for being what we are is fine, to expect better outcomes in days ahead is an idealism destined for disappointment.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A28WJUJF6D2ULA

 • Human Smoke By Nicholson Baker
23 September, 2008

Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization is Nicholson Baker's history of the lead-up to World War II and the United States' involvement in it. Rather than provide a continuous, blow-by-blow account of things, Baker uses hundreds of brief news items, averaging perhaps half a page in length. These range from 1892 to the end of 1941 (the vast majority of the book deals with the thirties and forties). As Baker recounts a wide assortment of events, he has several questions in mind. As he states in the afterword (p. 473): "Was [World War II] a `good war'? Did waging it help anyone who needed help?" Ultimately, Baker challenges World War II as the exemplar of just war. Baker's prose is engaging. He quotes whenever possible, and doesn't editorialize much. The brevity of his entries keeps the book moving at a fast pace. Baker draws heavily from newspapers, diaries, memoirs and public statements, and ties each news item to a specific date. This helps keep the material honest. A lot of what Baker focuses on reveals another side of World War II, one many Americans aren't familiar with. Baker works to show that World War II did quite a lot more harm than it did good. Nevertheless, he at no time sympathizes with the Nazis - he accurately portrays how terrible they could be. Baker explores the warmongering side of Roosevelt and Churchill as well as Hitler. There is a side of the U.S. and Britain that he is keen to show, and some of the things these nations did might amount to shocking revelations for many people. World War II was brought about, to a great degree, by that great confluence of warmongers. -The United States sold arms to Germany and Japan in the 1930s. -Franklin D. Roosevelt, along with a great many other Americans and citizens of the world, was blatantly anti-Semitic. -Before the Holocaust, Germany spent years trying to ship the Jews out. Nobody, including the United States, would take them. While this does not mitigate the horrors the Nazis perpetrated, it is alarming that by and large the rest of the world didn't care what happened to the Jews. Certainly this helped cultivate the environment for the Holocaust. -The British blockaded continental Europe, and would not allow food shipments through, even food intended for starving citizens of occupied France. Herbert Hoover, the much-reviled, erstwhile president, fought tooth and nail for the food shipments. -For years, Roosevelt taunted and provoked Japan, hoping to lure them into striking first, so that he could bring the United States into the war without reneging on his campaign promises to keep the country out of war. -Bombing, a major war strategy for both sides, was notoriously imprecise. An unbelievably small percentage of bombs hit their intended targets. Additionally, both Germany and Britain deliberately, purposely and repeatedly bombed civilian targets. Human Smoke is recommended to those with an interest in World War II, and to those who believe World War II was a just war, or that it was fought according to the criteria of just war by any nation.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A1LMBM1N4EXS5W

 • Human Smoke Is A Chronicle Of How The World Self-destructed In The Inferno Of World War Ii
25 September, 2008

Human Smoke is the most unusual book on World War II which I have read. The reason is the format. Award winning American pacifist author Nicholson Baker has told the grisly story by using a Wikepdia approach to his narrative structure. In succinct paragraphs he tells how the world entered the Dantean hell of World War II. A war in which over 50 million people died of battle, bombing, starvation, disease and execution. Baker's book is perfect for people who have limited time or short attention spans. It is a technique which would do well in textbook histories used in the classroom, Baker begins his book by looking at prewar Europe, Japan and the United States. He keeps his opinions to himself letting the paragraphs of current events at the time tell their own story. We learn among many other facts that: a. Great Britain failed in its policy of appeasement towards Hitler. b. Great Britain was not prepared in a military way to go to war with Germany to aid Poland in September 1939. c. Winston Churchill was a war hawk who called for war against the Reich. Churchill was no saint! Baker's intensive research reveals him as inimical to the work of Gandhi in India; the advocacy of poison gas against the enemy; the proponent of a blockade against German held Europe despite massive hunger and starvation among innocent women, children and other civilians. The reader will admire Churchill's tenacity and determination to defeat the Axis powers. Churchill was a complex genius! d. Hitler did not want to conquer the USA. He did want to rule continental Europe with England reigning over the seas and her colonies. Japan was to hold sway in Asia. e. Charles Lindbergh was an anti-semite and Nordic supremacist who led American First attempts to have the US follow a policy of isolationism. f. FDR worked behind the scenes to support Great Britain through his Lend-Lease plan. g. Baker tales the story of Quakers like Rufus Jones and Rev. Harry Emerson Fosdick who were opponents of the war. Many went to prison for their refusal to be drafted and participate in a bloody holocaust. h. Hundreds of voices speak in these short snaps of the historical newsreel. The voices range from the evil cries of Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin to Jews trapped in Germany such as Victor Klemperer. Holocaust victims, world leaders, famous writers such as Christopher Isherwood and Stephen Zweig all have their say. The book teaches us that the so called "good war" was an unspeakable tragedy with millions losing their lives. Baker's work will immerse you with the sights,sounds and actions that led the globe from peace down into the murky and bloody pit of total warfare waged with horrific modern weaponry. The book ends in December 1941 as America is sucked into war's maelstrom of death by the attack of the Japanese at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. As one who has read hundreds of books on World War II this is one I highly recommend and will use often in my own research on the war. The title comes from a remark made by Nazi General Franz Halder. As Baker states on page 474 in quoting Halder: :...Halder told an interrogator than when he was imprisoned in Auschwitz late in the war he saw flakes of smoke blow into his cell. Human smoke he called it." Nicholas Baker dedicates his fine book to all the pacifists who were for peace and not war. This reviewer also hopes we all honor their memories by serving the blessed cause of peace. Read and learn!

- Reviewed by customer ID: A1G37DFO8MQW0M

 • There Is No Revisionism On The Planet That Can Turn Churchill Into Hitler, No Matter How Eloquently The Attempt Is Made.
23 September, 2008

"Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization", best-selling author Baker's first work of non-fiction, is a history of the buildup to World War II as told via snippets from newspapers, personal diaries, memoirs, etc. Baker provides a minimum of personal interjections or opinions along the way, preferring instead to let the chosen selections speak for themselves. The end result is a grim and depressing narrative that shows the breaking out of World War II as the inevitable conclusion of the machinations of American industrialists looking for new markets in Asia and Europe, Roosevelt's desires to impose his visions of an Anglo-American order upon the world, and, particularly, Winston Churchill's ruthless and bloodthirsty pursuit of a wider and more devastating war. It needs to be said by the reviewer and, hopefully, known by the reader that Baker is emphatically not a historian. The text itself and post-release interviews with Baker himself indicate that the author had a thesis in his head before the book was written, and the material presented is that which most strongly supports it. The result is a tale of a haunting descent into both total war and industrial holocaust that, possibly, could have been, if not avoided, at least mitigated, had the men in power simply had the moral fiber to choose differently. This book is going to appeal strongly to a certain subset of readers that wish to believe that capitalism, anti-semitism, etc., were stronger factors in the outbreak of World War II than, say, fascism and national socialism. The supposed anti-semitism of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt gets almost as much ink as that of the Nazis, particularly as it involves the USA's (along with most every other nation on the planet) unwillingness to take in more Jewish refugees than our immigration laws at the time allowed. Likewise, the push by American aircraft manufacturers to design and sell new warplanes to all and sundry in the 30's, even though the total figures involved come out to about 100 planes total throughout the pre-1939 period, gets more consideration as a cause of the increasing belligerence and actual combat around the globe than does the considerably more gigantic buildup of the fascist and Soviet militaries during the same time. Likewise, a lot of pages and ink are given over to the pronunciamentos and goals of various pacifist movements through the first decades of the 20th Century, with the clear subtext of "had we listened to them, the war would never have started, or at least not been as vicious". While there is much to be said for studying the pacifist movement prior to and during the start of World War II, there is little to be said for believing for an instant that, had Churchill or Roosevelt just listened more closely to the them, Hitler and Tojo would've somehow been less warlike as a result. That leads to the biggest problem of the book; it's _incredibly_ biased. All histories are, to some extent, a reflection of the author's biases, sure. However, the lack of any context being provided here would lead the uneducated reader to assume that the viciousness of the war itself and the Holocaust need not have happened as they did. The lack of much editorial context by the author actually serves to reinforce this aspect; the reader has no guide as to why Baker chose a given text in the first place. The reader, if not Baker's argument, would actually be better served if Nicholson had chosen to provide more editorial context for his selections. At least that way, the pro-pacifist, anti-Churchillian bias of the author would be a known quantity instead of something just hinted at. The obvious counter-argument can be made that, well: these ARE Churchill and Roosevelt's and Chennault's own words, are they not? Sure, they are. However, the context that would clearly show that these men were emphatically NOT the primary actors driving the events of the era is simply not there. We hear much of the bloodthirsty-ness of Churchill, Bomber Harris, etc. The comparable and considerably more voluminous and damning words of the Hitlers and Mussolinis of the era are much less present. When they are present at all, they've been chosen to show the rare moments when these men were hoping for an end to the war they had started (so long as it ended on their terms and with their bloody conquests already made allowed to be kept). While a very engrossing and emotionally effective (and affecting) read, I could not recommend "Human Smoke" to anyone whom I was not already aware of possessing a clear understanding of how World War II came to be. While the study of pacifism in the 30's and early 40's has its merits, the conclusion that it would have been effective had just certain men in the West been willing to listen to it, is unsupportable.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A3PYM841JPGTEY

 • The Unnecessary World War Ii
27 October, 2008

I have lived in Germany during world war II and fully agree with Nicholson Baker's view that this war could have been prevented if England and France had not declared war on Germany or if they had agreed to an early peace treaty. From my experience during the war I can definitely say that most Germans were not in favor of any war with the west and even the Nazis would have agreed to a quick peace treaty. This would have prevented the death of millions of people including the European Jews and the destruction of Europe. I have described my life under the Nazis and what we were thinking at that time in my book "HITLER YOUTH TO U.S. CITIZEN", by Friedrich Neuhaus; fcneuhaus1@aol.com, see also the book listing in: www.amazon.com.

- Reviewed by customer ID: AH5IHHEGH535E


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