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Gimme Some Truth

The John Lennon FBI Files

Jon Wiener author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of California Press

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Gimme Some Truth cover

When FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover reported to the Nixon White House in 1972 about the Bureau's surveillance of John Lennon, he began by explaining that Lennon was a 'former member of the Beatles singing group'. When a copy of this letter arrived in response to Jon Wiener's 1981 Freedom of Information request, the entire text was withheld - along with almost 200 other pages - on the grounds that releasing it would endanger national security. This book tells the story of the author's remarkable fourteen-year court battle to win release of the Lennon files under the Freedom of Information Act in a case that went all the way to the Supreme Court. With the publication of "Gimme Some Truth", 100 key pages of the Lennon FBI file are available - complete and unexpurgated, fully annotated and presented in a 'before and after' format. Lennon's file was compiled in 1972, when the war in Vietnam was at its peak, when Nixon was facing re-election, and when the 'clever Beatle' was living in New York and joining up with the New Left and the anti-war movement. The Nixon administration's efforts to 'neutralize' Lennon are the subject of Lennon's file. The documents are reproduced in facsimile so that readers can see all the classification stamps, marginal notes, blacked out passages and - in some cases - the initials of J. Edgar Hoover. The file includes lengthy reports by confidential informants detailing the daily lives of anti-war activists, memos to the White House, transcripts of TV shows on which Lennon appeared, and a proposal that Lennon be arrested by local police on drug charges. Fascinating, engrossing, at points hilarious and absurd, "Gimme Some Truth" documents an era when rock music seemed to have real political force and when youth culture challenged the status quo in Washington. It also delineates the ways the Reagan, Bush, and Clinton administrations fought to preserve government secrecy, and highlights the legal strategies adopted by those who have challenged it.

"If only the New Left and the 'youth culture' that coexisted with it had been as threatening to the US government as the latter seemed to believe. That wistful thought occurs while perusing this chronicle of the Nixon administration's harassment of John Lennon for his involvement in radical causes during the early '70's. . . . For all the unintentional humor that pervades these documents, they convey a far more sobering message: how willing the government has been at times to spy on, intimidate, and harass those whom it regards as its most effective critics." * Mother Jones *
"Lennon himself isn't the main focus here. Instead, [the] long struggle to get the withheld files released is made an object lesson in the tenacity of government secrecy, which Wiener convincingly depicts as a bureaucratic habit so ingrained that the FBI (or any other government agency) treats the public's right to know—FOIA or no FOIA—as a nuisance to be circumvented whenever possible. That's true even when the materials being protected are trivial, as these turn out to be."  * Washington Post *
"John Lennon's deportation case is well known. What Jon Wiener does in Gimme Some Truth is tell two virtually unknown stories—the history of the FBI role in the White House deportation campaign and the fourteen-year battle to force Hoover's heirs to release Lennon's file." * Journal of American History *
"Return with Wiener to another, not necessarily simpler but very different time when governments feared revolution by the young, fomented by a rock star. . . . The documents constitute an impressive display of wrong-headedness . . . A great period piece." * Booklist *
"An excellent account." * The Oregonian *

ISBN: 9780520222465

Dimensions: 254mm x 178mm x 23mm

Weight: 635g

344 pages