Synopses & Reviews
and#147;The great cause of global health is in Robert Proctorand#8217;s debt.
Golden Holocaust is a model of impassioned scholarly research and advocacy. As Proctor so powerfully demonstrates, the time has come to hold the tobacco industry accountable for the massive disease, debility, and death that they produce around the world.and#8221;--Allan M. Brandt, author of
The Cigarette Century"Robert Proctor unpacks the sad history of an industrial fraud. His tightly reasoned exploration touches on all topics on which the tobacco makers lied repeatedly to Congress and the public."--Don Kennedy, President Emeritus, Stanford University and former Editor, Science
"This book is a remarkable compendium of evil. It will keep you spinning from page one through the last with a detailed description of how one of the most notorious industries in American history deceived and manipulated the public, the politicians, and the scientific community into allowing an age-old toxin to be breathed directly into the lungs of millions of Americans. It is the type of book that makes you wonder how, in Godand#8217;s name, this could have happened?"-David Rosner, author of Deceit and Denial
"Proctor powerfully documents how a small number of tobacco companies caused a tragic, global epidemic. His account of this history and of the 'lessons learned' is relevant to the ongoing effort to end the tobacco epidemic and to efforts to control emerging pandemics of non-communicable diseases." --Jonathan M. Samet, M.D., M.S., Director, Institute for Global Health, University of Southern California
and#147;Proctor weaves together the public historical record with inside details and insights from thousands of once secret industry documents. Anyone who cares about health, deception, science or politics will learn something new from this book.and#8221;-Stanton A. Glantz, Professor of Medicine, UC San Francisco, and author of The Cigarette Papers
"A powerful indictment of the world's deadliest industry"-John R. Seffrin, PhD, Chief Executive Officer, American Cancer Society
"By carefully analyzing formerly secret industry documents, Proctor has shown how cigarette manufacturers knew that the "filters" on virtually all cigarettes sold today are utterly fraudulent. His call for a ban is likely to change how we think about such devices; this excellent book is a must read for tobacco control and environmental activists alike."--Thomas E. Novotny, MD MPH, Former US Assistant Surgeon General and CEO, Cigarette Butt Pollution Project.
"Scholarly yet eminently readable, indeed gripping, this book asks us to consider what the end game for tobacco might look like. A must-read for policy makers and public health officials, and for anyone struggling against the tobacco industry in the field."--Professor Judith Mackay, Senior Advisor, World Lung Foundation, Hong Kong, China SAR"
"The machine-rolled cigarette is the single most deadly consumer product ever made. Proctor's powerful, witty, and wide-ranging book shows how we came to accept as normal the promotion and use of products that have caused a global epidemic of disease and death. But more importantly, he outlines a way to end this grim chapter in human history."--Ruth E. Malone, RN, PhD, FAAN, Editor, Tobacco Control
and#147;This is the most important book on smoking in fifty years. Proctorand#8217;s unique mix of scholarship, readability, wit and political understanding tells a no-holds-barred story with conclusions that governments cannot afford to ignore. It will change the course of public health history.and#8221;--Professor Mike Daube, President, Australian Council on Smoking and Health
"Proctor draws masterfully from a vast archive of documents wrested from the industry, including many never before discussed, and mounts an unforgettable case about what the tobacco industry has done and what we must do about it. This is the book to help us understand what we must do to save lives."--Peter Galison, author of Einstein's Clocks, Poincarand#233;and#8217;s Maps
"Golden Holocaust will stand indelibly as a landmark in the field of medicine and the history of science. It is a monument of committed scholarship and cool passion, making brilliant use of the new technics of data-mining to reveal a terrible calculus, while giving the lie to claims that advocacy must be the enemy of objectivity. Lives, far too many lives, depend on what this book contains."--Iain Boal, Birkbeck College, London and Guggenheim Fellow in Science and Technology
"Robert Proctor draws an unvarnished conclusion: that the tobacco industry, and the men who led it, were evil, plain and simple. They knowingly sold a product that, when used as intended, killed people. And then they conspired to suppress the evidence. Not everyone will agree with Proctor, but anyone interested in the intertwined issues of science and health, and culture and commerce, needs to read this book."--Naomi Oreskes, coauthor of Merchants of Doubt
and#147;Robert Proctor lays bare the deliberate choices made by the tobacco companies to addict their customers and cause premature death. Here is clarity to the unprecedented scientific fraud perpetrated by the tobacco industry.and#8221;--William A. Farone, Ph.D. Chairman, Applied Power Concepts, Inc. (formerly Director of Scientific Research for Philip Morris USA, 1977-1984).
Review
and#8220;[A] monumental and sobering indictment.and#8221;
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"Engaging, inexhaustible with information, and driven."--Chronicle of Higher Education
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and#8220;Proctor challenges his readers to conceptualize a much happier and healthier world in which the manufacture and sale of cigarettes is prohibited.and#8221;
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and#8220;A landmark study in medicine and the history of science, and of an industry [Proctor] describes as and#8216;evil.and#8217;and#8221;
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"A passionate work and not for the faint of heart."--American Jrnl of Epidemiology
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and#8220;Draws on previously confidential industry documents and Proctorand#8217;s own experience as the first historian to testify in court about [industry] lies. What lies? How deep into the pleural linings did they go? All the way.and#8221;
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and#8220;Lays out in head-shaking detail how a handful of companies painstakingly designed, produced, and mass-marketed the most lethal product on the planet.and#8221;
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and#8220;Proctor documents a breadth and depth of the industryand#8217;s duplicitous actions that is astounding.and#8221;
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and#8220;A nearly 800-page book that begins as the Bible of the twentieth-century cigarette industry only to end as its millennial counterblaste.and#8221;
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and#8220;Proctorand#8217;s extensive use of previously secret tobacco industry documents makes his case convincing, even compelling.and#8221;
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“An invaluable reference for historians interested in the tobacco industry, health and medicine, or marketing in the twentieth century.” Katherine E. Kenny Sociology/Science Studies, University of California San Diego - Global Public Health
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“A comprehensive and devastating account of tobacco industry perfidy in promoting the sale of its deadly cigarettes.” Karen Miller Russell, University of Georgia - Jrnl Of American History
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“A historians testimony on his own terms. . . . Entertaining and hard-hitting.” Barron H. Lerner, New York University School of Medicine - Bulletin Of The History Of Medicine
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“A passionate work and not for the faint of heart.” Carol Benedict, Georgetown University - American Historical Review
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“Engaging, inexhaustible with information, and driven.” American Journal Of Epidemiology
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and#8220;An invaluable reference for historians interested in the tobacco industry, health and medicine, or marketing in the twentieth century.and#8221;
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and#8220;A comprehensive and devastating account of tobacco industry perfidy in promoting the sale of its deadly cigarettes.and#8221;
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and#8220;A historianand#8217;s testimony on his own terms. . . . Entertaining and hard-hitting.and#8221;
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and#8220;A passionate work and not for the faint of heart.and#8221;
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and#8220;Engaging, inexhaustible with information, and driven.and#8221;
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andquot;Proctorandrsquo;s book will be of great interest . . . it debunks fraudulent industry claims past and present, provides credible arguments for banning cigarettes, and delineates steps to take before abolition is politically possible. . . . For historians, Proctorandrsquo;s book particularly calls for serious conversation about ethics and best practices in our era of decreased public support of universities and rising dependence on corporate donors.andquot;
Synopsis
The cigarette is the deadliest artifact in the history of human civilization. It is also one of the most beguiling, thanks to more than a century of manipulation at the hands of tobacco industry chemists. In Golden Holocaust, Robert N. Proctor draws on reams of formerly-secret industry documents to explore how the cigarette came to be the most widely-used drug on the planet, with six trillion sticks sold per year. He paints a harrowing picture of tobacco manufacturers conspiring to block the recognition of tobacco-cancer hazards, even as they ensnare legions of scientists and politicians in a web of denial. Proctor tells heretofore untold stories of fraud and subterfuge, and he makes the strongest case to date for a simple yet ambitious remedy: a ban on the manufacture and sale of cigarettes.
About the Author
Robert N. Proctor is Professor of the History of Science at Stanford University and author of Cancer Wars, Racial Hygiene, and The Nazi War on Cancer He is also a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.