Pick of the paperbacks; The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence, by Victor Marchetti and John D. Marks. New York: Dell Publishing Company. $2.95

January 12, 1981

The value of this controversial book about the CIA is not so much the secrets it reveals, as the questions it forces Americans to ask about the role of a secret agency in an open society.

The authors have produced a sustained attack on covert activities abroad -- and at home. They believe the secret agency should be more open, more accountable to Congress, less concerned with overthrowing foreign governments and more with collecting intelligence.

The CIA waged a closed courtroom battle to block publication, amid warnings that the national interest would be endangered if the proceedings -- or the book -- reached the public. Recent court decisions have declassified many previously CIA-deleted passages, wh ich now appear in this paperback edition.