"Here, author and journalist Gourevitch and documentary filmmaker Morris  have compiled the complete story of Abu Ghraib, from Iraqi prison to  prison of occupying American forces, and the crimes its walls concealed- only some of which were revealed in photographs that hit the global media  in 2003. Drawing from Morris's lengthy interviews with the soldiers who  photographed and participated in prisoner abuse, the authors render in  clear detail the horror and inhumanity of Abu Ghraib, for prisoner and  guard alike: "Inexperienced, untrained, under attack, and under orders to  do wrong, the low-ranking reservist MPs who implemented the nefarious  policy... knew that what they were doing was immoral, and they knew that  if it wasn't illegal, it ought to be." From the squalid conditions to the  lack of regulations to the appalling acts that jolted the world, this  chronicle of unconscionable behavior, and the political maneuvering that  took place in its aftermath, is as much a page-turner as any fictional  thriller. Companion to Morris's documentary film of the same name, this  deft piece of reportage will stir readers' anger, at both the actions and  the consequences; not only was the torture purposeless ("Nobody has even  bothered to pretend otherwise"), but "no soldier above the rank of  sergeant ever served jail time... [and] Nobody was ever charged with  torture, or war crimes, or any violation of the Geneva Conventions." A  thorough, terrifying account of an American-made "bedlam," the latest  from Gourevitch is as troubling, and arguably as important, as his 1998  Rwanda investigation We Wish to Inform You that Tomorrow We Will be  Killed with Our Families." — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"This book has to be read." — Newsweek
"A tightly knit and damning narrative... one of the most devastating of the  many books on Iraq." — New York Times Book Review 
"Philip Gourevitch's exemplary book will take its toll for years." — The New York Observer
"Gourevitch's eye for telling detail evokes the best of The New  Yorker tradition-Capote's In Cold Blood, Hersey's  Hiroshima... Standard Operating Procedure is essential reading for  our time." — The Tennessean
"As much a page-turner as any fictional thriller... A thorough, terrifying  account of an American-made 'bedlam,' the latest from Gourevitch is as  troubling, and arguably as important, as his 1998 Rwanda investigation  We Wish to Inform You that Tomorrow We Will be Killed with Our  Families." — Publishers Weekly 
"[A] gut wrenching morality check" — NPR's Talk of the Nation 
"Admirable... remarkable power" — Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times 
"A compelling story... [Gourevitch] is a master of looking more closely,  which means both more sympathetically and more critically... Gourevitch's  account takes us outside the frame, giving us the chance to understand  the dynamic of the unit in which violence and romance were S.O.P... The  book shows how lawlessness became the law." — The Los Angeles Times
"Remarkable." — The Denver Post 
"Gourevitch...brings to this study of the Abu Ghraib scandal the same  graceful balancing of reportage and insight that marked his extraordinary  book on the Rwandan genocide, We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We  Will Be Killed with Our Families... the shocks arrive through language  alone." — Time Out NY