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A Must-Read Before the Upcoming U.S. Presidential Election

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Patricia Elzie-Tuttle

Contributing Editor

Patricia Elzie-Tuttle is a writer, podcaster, librarian, and information fanatic who appreciates potatoes in every single one of their beautiful iterations. Patricia earned a B.A. in Creative Writing and Musical Theatre from the University of Southern California and an MLIS from San Jose State University. Her weekly newsletter, Enthusiastic Encouragement & Dubious Advice offers self-improvement and mental health advice, essays, and resources that pull from her experience as a queer, Black, & Filipina person existing in the world. She is also doing the same on the Enthusiastic Encouragement & Dubious Advice Podcast. More of her written work can also be found in Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy edited by Kelly Jensen, and, if you’re feeling spicy, in Best Women’s Erotica of the Year, Volume 4 edited by Rachel Kramer Bussel. Patricia has been a Book Riot contributor since 2016 and is currently co-host of the All the Books! podcast and one of the weekly writers of the Read This Book newsletter. She lives in Oakland, CA on unceded Ohlone land with her wife and a positively alarming amount of books. Find her on her Instagram, Bluesky, and LinkTree.

Today’s book recommendation is new nonfiction that will keep readers enthralled from beginning to end. Psychological warfare often seems like something that governments do to “other people” in a mystical “somewhere else,” but that is far from the truth. This book is an absolute must-read before the upcoming U.S. presidential election.

Book cover of Stories Are Weapons: Psychological Warfare and the American Mind by Annalee Newitz

Stories Are Weapons: Psychological Warfare and the American Mind by Annalee Newitz

I did not truly understand what psychological warfare is before reading this book. Sure, I knew that people in power or formerly in power would tell blatant lies in speeches and on the internet and I had categorized this behavior as both ignorant and hateful. After reading this book, I now understand how diabolically strategic these lies, often in the form of stories, truly are.

Annalee Newitz is a journalist and an author of both nonfiction and science fiction (and a podcast host!). They take readers on a harrowing journey as they not only dive deep into well-secured archives but also take a crash course in Psychological Operations (PSYOP) from an instructor who taught PSYOP in the U.S. Army for many years. They also learn and share about the golden rule of PSYOP, which the U.S. government has disregarded numerous times. Newitz not only explains what psychological warfare is but the history of psychological warfare in both the United States and abroad where the United States was, and is, involved. While many people think of heavy artillery at the idea of war, psychological warfare can be unanticipated and more insidious.

To truly understand the United States’ particular flavor of psyops, the author takes us back almost 250 years to the end of the Revolutionary War and the beginning of the Indian Wars. They explain in detail how anti-Indigenous propaganda sought to wipe the memories of settlers and convince them to believe that the Indigenous people just disappeared or perhaps integrated into “society.” The book is not all distant history, though it’s definitely a crash course in psyops in the U.S. of the past 200+ years. Newitz explores and paints the picture of how psyops were used to affect the 2016 presidential election and the ramp-up to Cambridge Analytica’s role in it.

While it is terrifying to think of how social media can help psyops spread like wildfire, a term I don’t use lightly as a Californian myself, the author offers a beacon of hope toward winning the culture wars. They share not only how to identify psyops online (or otherwise), but the important roles in which information professionals like librarians play in changing the tides.

This is an incredibly engaging read that still has my head spinning months after I’ve read it.


That’s it for now, book-lovers!

Patricia

Find me on Book Riot, the All the Books podcast, Bluesky, TikTok, and Instagram.

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