Marin Independent Journal

Living in `the age of the indelible'

- By Jennifer Szalai

The people in Kerry Howley's new book include fabulists, truth tellers, combatants, whistleblo­wers. Like many of us, they have left traces of themselves in the digital ether by making a phone call, texting a friend, looking up something online. Certain convenienc­es have become so frictionle­ss that we reflexivel­y entrust devices with mundane yet intimate secrets: group-chat gossip, numbers of steps taken, dumb selfies.

“It is our fate to live in the age of the indelible,” Howley writes in “Bottoms Up and the Devil Laughs,” her account of the national security state and the people entangled in it. “It's best to just take another photograph. Keep building up the database. Throw it into the cloud, whatever that is.”

Howley is a writer for New

York magazine and the author of “Thrown” (2014), a book about mixed martial arts fighters (real) that was narrated by a philosophy student named Kit (not real). As far as I can tell, “Bottoms Up” seems to be narrated by Howley — although who she “really is” and, by extension, who any of us “really are” is something that this book encourages us not to take for granted.

The book is riveting and darkly funny and, in all senses of the word, unclassifi­able. Howley writes about privacy and its absence; about hiding and leaking and secrets and betrayal. But she also writes about the strange experience of living, and how it gets flattened and codified into data that can be turned into portraits of static, permanent beings — creatures who would be unrecogniz­able to ourselves.

“With endless informatio­n comes the ability to take informatio­n from its context, to tell stories perfectly matched to the intentions of the teller, freed from the complex texture of reality,” Howley writes. Countering that slide toward bland propaganda, “Bottoms Up” returns informatio­n to its context, capturing as much as possible the texture of reality, showing us how bewilderin­g it often is.

She reintroduc­es us to figures such as Edward Snowden, Julian Assange, Chelsea Manning and John Walker Lindh. We revisit the case of John Kiriakou, the exCIA officer who disclosed on television that the U.S. government had waterboard­ed (that is, tortured) a detainee. Kiriakou would become the first CIA officer convicted of a leak. He later took a job at the Russian propaganda outfit Sputnik Radio.

But at the center of this book is Reality Winner (“her real name, let's move past it now”), who was 9 years old on 9/11. What happened to Winner is the point on which a number of the book's themes converge. She joined the Air Force at 18, becoming a linguist who spoke Dari and Pashto. She later worked as a contractor for the National Security Agency. In 2017 she was arrested for mailing five

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