Ashes to Ashes: America's Hundred-Year Cigarette War, the Public Health, and the Unabashed Triumph of Philip Morris.

AuthorWeinberg, Steve

As the evidence accumulates that tobacco-company executives have been lying for decades about the manipulation of nicotine in cigarettes, author Richard Kluger appears in timely fashion with perhaps the most thoroughly researched book ever about the history of the deadly product.

Kluger specializes in thick books, one per decade. The first, Simple Justice: The History of Brown v. Board of Education and Black America's Struggle for Equality, appeared in 1975. Length: more than 800 pages - a nonfiction masterpiece.

The second, The Paper: The Life and Death of the New York Herald Tribune, appeared in 1986. Length: also more than 800 pages.

Kluger's latest is about the tobacco industry. Length: You guessed it.

This book is not an expose. Not until page 760 does Kluger say that he has come to believe cigarette-company executives lied about the health charges made against their product.

Kluger explains that his most difficult task "was to try to suspend moral judgment as long as possible in sifting through this immense and untidy collection of materials in order to craft a coherent social narrative about an industry that was, after all, a thriving enterprise well before a conclusive scientific consensus on the hazards of its products was achieved. My intent throughout has been to bring an unpremeditated approach to a subject that has historically generated a good deal more heat than light."

Kluger's nine-page foreword, "A Quick Drag," however, is brilliantly provocative. "In a case of supreme irony, not to say perversity, the more evidence accumulated by science on the ravaging effects of tobacco, the more lucrative the business has become, and the wider the margin of profit," he writes. "Why should this be? Did mankind simply become putty in the hands of the master manipulators who ran the cigarette business? ... Or have we been convinced by these merchants' unyielding insistence that peddling poison in the form of tobacco is no vice if (a) it is freely picked by its users and (b) its dangers have not yet been conclusively, to the last logarithm of human intellect, proven?"

Kluger raises prickly questions, too, about the motives of governments that refuse to make smoking illegal. "Can all these national governments be justly accused of callous indifference to the well-being of their peoples, or might it be argued instead that, in Darwinian terms, economic survival has gained priority over mere physical fitness, to the chagrin of public-health...

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