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The Secret Man: The Story of Watergate's Deep Throat

by Bob Woodward

List Price:$23.00
Average Rating:4 out of 5 stars
Lowest New Price:$3.79

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Editorial Reviews
Product Description
In Washington, D.C., where little stays secret for long, the identity of Deep Throat -- the mysterious source who helped Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein break open the Watergate scandal in 1972 -- remained hidden for 33 years. Now, Woodward tells the story of his long, complex relationship with W. Mark Felt, the enigmatic former No. 2 man in the Federal Bureau of Investigation who helped end the presidency of Richard Nixon.

The Secret Man chronicles the story in intimate detail, from Woodward's first, chance encounter with Felt in the Nixon White House, to their covert, middle-of-the-night meetings in an underground parking garage, to the aftermath of Watergate and decades beyond, until Felt finally stepped forward at age 91 to unmask himself as Deep Throat.

The Secret Man reveals the struggles of a patriotic career FBI man, an admirer of J. Edgar Hoover, the Bureau's legendary director. After Hoover's death, Mark Felt found himself in the cross fire of one of Washington's historic contests, as Nixon and his men tried to dominate the Bureau and cover up the crimes of the administration. This book illuminates the ongoing clash between temporary political power and the permanent bureaucracy of government. Woodward explores Felt's conflicts and motives as he became Deep Throat, not only secretly confirming Woodward and Bernstein's findings from dozens of other sources, but giving a sense of the staggering sweep of Nixon's criminal abuses.

In this volume, part memoir, part morality tale, part political and journalistic history, Woodward provides context and detail about The Washington Post's expose of Watergate. He examines his later, tense relationship with Felt, when the FBI man stood charged with authorizing FBI burglaries. (Not knowing Felt's secret role in the demise of his own presidency, Nixon testified at Felt's trial, and Ronald Reagan later pardoned him.) Woodward lays bare his own personal struggles as he tries to define his relationship, his obligations, and his gratitude to this extraordinary confidential source.

The Secret Man is an intense, 33-year journey, providing a one-of-a-kind study of trust, deception, pressures, alliances, doubts and a lifetime of secrets. Woodward has spent more than three decades asking himself why Mark Felt became Deep Throat. Now the world can see what happened and why, bringing to a close one of the last chapters of Watergate.

Amazon.com Review
Bob Woodward's secret man is no longer a secret, now that former FBI assistant director W. Mark Felt and his family have revealed that he was Deep Throat, Woodward's legendary anonymous source for his Watergate reporting. Soon after Felt made his identity known, Woodward, who "is prone to complete his homework before it is due or even assigned," according to the afterword by his reporting partner Carl Bernstein, himself revealed that he had been working on a manuscript in preparation for that moment, one that would after 30 years tell the inside story of their mysterious, and history-changing, relationship.

Certainly you get in The Secret Man the cloak-and-dagger details you'd expect--and are likely already familiar with from both the book and the superb movie of All the President's Men: the late-night garage meetings, the red flag in the flower pot, the whispered warning that lives were in danger. Woodward retells the still-riveting story of his and Bernstein's unearthing of the scandal with efficiency and with the last puzzle piece in place. And he is able both to explain some of Felt's motivations, as an FBI loyalist disgusted by Nixon staffers trying to run roughshod over his agency, and to trace some of his remarkable bureaucratic tactics, including commissioning an FBI leak inquiry and deflecting it away from himself. Most fascinatingly, he gives a warts-and-all account of his shameless youthful cultivation of Felt, beginning with their first encounter when Woodward was a bored Navy lieutenant on the make, just three years before being assigned to cover the arraignment of five men in business suits arrested in the offices of the Democratic National Committee. But in a crucial way this doesn't seem to be the book that Woodward had wanted to write, for Felt remains a mystery. A shadowy father figure during the Watergate period, Felt soon distanced himself from Woodward after running into legal trouble of his own, and they fell out of touch in the intervening years. When Woodward finally reestablished contact in 2000, Felt had lost most of his memory, and any understanding with his former source, with whom he was so closely tied in both his private and public lives, remained poignantly but frustratingly unreachable. --Tom Nissley


All Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4 out of 5 stars
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

5 out of 5 starsheads up!, 2008-08-01
i just bought a new hard cover edition of the secret man at my local 99 cent store!
there were about 6 copies in stock when i left the store!
just sharing! lol!


5 stars for the price alone!


0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

2 out of 5 starsA disappointment, 2008-07-28
The good parts of the story are already in All the President's Men. The new material is Oprah-ready filler about a young man and his source. Woodward has not (dares not?) thought very deeply about Mark Felt, his motives, or his trustworthiness. This is the same incomplete Watergate story that his the papers in 1973.

I know journalists can only write the first draft of history. But Woodward is still selling that same first rough draft three decades after the events took place.


0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

3 out of 5 starsWOODWARD'S INDECISION LEAVES QUESTIONS UNANSWERED, 2008-07-02
Bob Woodward's inability to push Felt before old age rendered Felt unable to answer the questions about why Felt chose to provide information about Watergate.

Woodward's excuse about honoring Felt's brushoffs during the late 70s and early 80s ring hollow coming from a reporter who pursued Felt during the Watergate scandal. Woodward knew that the day would arrive when Felt would be exposed as Deep Throat and American's would want a detailed answer to why Felt decided to become the inside source that helped Woodward and Bernstein expose Nixon's involvement in the cover-up.

Woodward should have pushed Felt to record his reasons with the promise they would not be revealed until Felt's death or he decided to go public.

Since Woodward had kept Felt's identity secret long after Watergate had faded into history, Felt should have felt comfortable enough to provide such information. However, for his own reasons, Woodward did not pursue Felt and it leaves the Watergate scandal an unfinished product.


1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:

4 out of 5 starsThe Definitive Coda to the Watergate Scandal, 2008-02-02
The book should be re-titled "What Mark Felt, felt and when did he feel it?" Not only does "The Secret Man" reveal the complex interactions between Woodward and Bernstein and "Deep Throat," but, Felt's motives and the wrenching and tortuous feeling he went through as he betrayed the agency he loved.

Bringing to account a Presidency whose corruption was out of control, was only one of many motives that drove the second in command of J. Edgar Hoover's FBI to place his career and his sanity at risk. The others were: protecting and stopping the manipulation of the FBI; his love for Hoover and for the game of clandestine political operating; and finally, last but certainly not least, as a way of exacting revenge for being passed over repeatedly for the top job because he was a Jew.

As the cliché goes, hindsight is not only always 20-20 but evidently is also much more relaxing, as this is a much smoother read than "All the President's men." It puts the final punctuation marks around the political scandal of our era, and that mark is an explanation point.

Except for explaining the 18 and a half-minute gap on the Nixon tapes, this book pulls together the remaining dangling threads of the Watergate saga. Four Stars



0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

3 out of 5 starsMark Felt and his secret life., 2007-09-17
So Woodward and Berstein used Felt's advice and guidance to unmask the Watergate cover up in the White House. Since this book was written by Woodward, I often wonder what portion of the feelings/viewpoints can truly be attributed to Mark Felt and what can be attributed to Bob Woodward. Felt had a ax to grind with Nixon for politicizing the FBI and being jumped over twice for FBI Director. Felt is also praiseworthy of Hoover's efforts at the FBI. That in a nutshell tells that Felt has his own agenda for the agency. The tapes reveal that Nixon also probably knows Felt is feeding information to Woodward and Berstein. Yet despite that, former President Nixon testifies in defense of Felt/Miller at their felony trials in the eighties. Nixon sure did turn the other cheek for Felt when the going got tough.

There is a lot of information in this book. I am not sure all of it is praiseworthy of W. Mark Felt. It does show the atmosphere this country was in following the sixties, and the breakdown in trust of the political leadership of the country. I find it unusual that Felt could justify his own authorization of illegal breakins on Weathermen families, when this was what got Nixon in trouble.




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