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The most important and most riveting work we have yet had from Richard Kluger,
whose greatly acclaimed landmark books, Simple Justice and The Paper, have become
classics in their fields. Ashes to Ashes is a monumental history of the American
tobacco industry: its awesome and ironic success in developing the
cigarette, modern society's most widespread instrument of self-destruction, into
America's most profitable consumer product; its energized, work-obsessed royal
families, the Dukes and the Reynoldses, and their battling successors like the
eccentric autocrat George Washington Hill and the feisty Joseph F. Cullman; its
generations of entrepreneurial geniuses; its cunning business strategies and
marketing dazzle; its deft political power plays; its relentless, often devious
attacks on antismoking forces in science, public health, and government. And
there is the weirdly symbiotic relationship of an industry geared at any cost to
sell, sell, sell cigarettes, and an American public habituated to ignore all
warnings and buy, buy, buy. Richard Kluger began a career in journalism at The Wall Street Journal, and was a writer for Forbes magazine and then the New York Post before becoming literary editor of the New York Herald Tribune. In book publishing he served as executive editor at Simon and Schuster and editor in chief at Atheneum. In addition to his two books of social history, he has written six novels. He and his wife, Phyllis, who have two sons and have written two novels together, live near Princeton, New Jersey. (From the book jacket) |