Review by Booklist Review
In 2010, Chelsea Manning, then a 22-year-old army military analyst, sent thousands of classified military documents to WikiLeaks. When this information started going public, some people called her a hero for exposing government actions that had been withheld from the American public; others called her a traitor and called for the death penalty. Manning covers these events in great detail in this engaging, brutally honest memoir, in which she eloquently describes her growing disillusionment with the military and the work-related PTSD that contributed to her ultimate decision. Manning also describes the inhumane treatment she experienced while awaiting trial before receiving her 35-year prison sentence, a sentence later commuted by President Obama. Perhaps even more compelling, however, are Manning's descriptions of living as a transgender woman. Assigned male at birth, Manning grew up in a dysfunctional family fueled by her ex-military father's hypermasculine drunken rages and her mother's silent descent into alcoholism and indifference. Broke, young, and on her own, Manning joined the army during the era of "Don't ask, don't tell." She tells of her increasingly desperate gender dysphoria; her inability to get recognition, let alone help; and her eventual successful battles to begin transitioning during her seven years of imprisonment. Her account is forthright and unapologetic, and Manning emerges as a strong, deeply engaged woman. Expect lots of well-deserved publicity.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review
After recounting a difficult childhood and her pride in joining the military, Manning chronicles her 2010 decision to leak 720,000 classified military documents while working in U.S. Army intelligence and declaration of her gender identity as a woman after being convicted of the unlawful possession and distribution of these materials. Originally scheduled for July 2020; with a 100,000-copy first printing.
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
The trans Army analyst who served seven years in prison for disclosing documents tells her story. "It is not possible to work in intelligence and not imagine disclosing the many secrets you bear," writes Manning, who documents the pressures she was under during her service in Iraq, leading her to load thousands of documents and videos onto a hard drive and share them with WikiLeaks in 2010. Her disillusionment with the U.S. operation in Iraq was earned the hard way, by witnessing firsthand mistakes with bloody results, institutionalized xenophobia, and other infamously oxymoronic qualities of "military intelligence." Manning doesn't make that joke, or any other one, in this memoir. As the title suggests, she writes like a computer programmer, albeit a very smart and literate one, who read more than 1,000 books during her imprisonment. Manning's story as it has unfolded over the past decade has been difficult to parse, but what becomes clear is that she is not a political partisan: The principle she holds most dear is transparency. Whether she is describing her unhappy childhood in central Oklahoma or her time locked in a cage in Kuwait, her story is rich in detail but somewhat flat in affect. She grew up with gender dysphoria from an early age. As soon as the internet was invented, she became a troll and a hacker ("My chan buddies and I were baby edgelords"), and it was these computer skills that "got me noticed--in both good and bad ways" in the Army. Once she realized that her apparent gender was inconsistent with her true self, transparency required she claim her identity as a woman. Doing so from military prison put her at odds with the institution in a whole new way, which she faced with grim determination. A prefatory note clarifies that this manuscript passed through the Department of Defense approval process, with only a few paragraphs redacted. Manning demonstrates her integrity in this meticulous account of a person constitutionally opposed to secrets and lies. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.