I Am Not Your Enemy
A Memoir
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4.0 • 3 Ratings
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
*NEW YORK TIMES EDITOR'S CHOICE *
*As heard on FRESH AIR and THIS AMERICAN LIFE*
“A hero for these times…Read her story and let it move you, infuriate you, and inspire you.”—Chelsea Handler“A unique and urgent story of what happened to a young woman who spoke out against the power of the state.”—Piper Kerman, author ofOrange Is the New Black"This personable and wide-ranging memoir lets [Winner] define herself on her own terms, offering an expressive, irreverent tour of America from the halls of power to cramped prison cells."—New York TimesThe memoir of a patriot.
Reality Winner was a twenty-five-year-old translator for the NSA when she read a classified document revealing what she assumed would make headlines during a time of unprecedented leaking: After blatant lies by the Trump administration and public silence by the NSA, there had in fact been foreign interference in the 2016 US election. In a breach of NSA protocol, she impulsively printed it, smuggled it out of the building, and mailed it to The Intercept, which published it and then promptly informed the NSA. For her crime, she received the longest prison sentence ever imposed on a government-affiliated employee convicted of a single count of leaking classified information and spent more than four years in federal prison.
Now, for the first time, Winner tells her own story: her unusual childhood in South Texas, with a brilliant but unstable father whose obsession with politics, ancient history, philosophy, and religion sparked her own interests in ancient civilizations and the study of foreign languages, including Latin, Arabic, Farsi, Dari, and Pashto; her patriotism, after 9/11, which led her to enlist in the Air Force and join the NSA, where the work she did in the hope of protecting American security was part of the US campaign in Afghanistan; and, most movingly, her life in the American prison system and how it nearly broke her.
I Am Not Your Enemy is Winner’s bold, brave examination of the moral choices that compel us to act, as well as an account of the risks one young woman took to protect her country and the price she paid for it. It is also a powerful argument for standing up for what you believe in during uncertain times—an inspiring message as relevant now as it was when she made her fateful decision.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Winner, who was convicted of leaking classified documents about Russian interference in the 2016 election, fleshes out her life beyond that scandal in this intriguing autobiography. She starts with the juicy stuff: in May 2017, Winner stumbled across a "bombshell" intelligence report while contracting for the NSA and feared the Trump administration would bury it. As a safeguard, she illegally printed a copy, smuggled it out of the building in her pantyhose, and sent it to the Intercept, who published it. The result for Winner was an unprecedented five-year sentence for espionage. After justifying her actions by citing "the widespread fear of the demise of American democracy," Winner delves into her early life, including her Texas upbringing with a mentally ill father who believed he was Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. Elsewhere, she covers her military career, her incarceration, and her choice, as an adult, to convert to Judaism. While Winner offers little new information that might sway her detractors, open-minded readers will be grateful for the opportunity to glimpse the inner world of a widely recognized but little-known figure. It's a worthwhile self-portrait.
Customer Reviews
Must read
Very educational and extremely well written.