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The Secret Man: The Story of Watergate's Deep Throat
(Hardcover, 2005)
Author: Bob Woodward, Carl Bernstein
 One of the best-kept secrets of the Washington world was finally revealed in 2005, when W. Mark Felt...
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LIST PRICE $23.00 Save 96%
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Format: Hardcover ISBN-10: 0743287150 ISBN-13: 9780743287159 Jul 2005 Publisher: Simon & Schuster 249 pages Language: English |
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Details

Synopsis One of the best-kept secrets of the Washington world was finally revealed in 2005, when W. Mark Felt, a retired FBI agent, was identified as the insider source referred to as "Deep Throat" in Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's 1970s Watergate saga, ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN. This revelation freed Woodward to publish THE SECRET MAN, which fleshes out the previous accounts, providing new facts, and which tries to get a fix on the man who appears to have gained nothing from his bold actions. Woodward struggles to find the motive behind Felt's actions: Was it career disappointment, after having been passed over twice by Nixon for the top FBI job; or was it something to do with Nixon's misuse of the bureau? Woodward reports how, after Felt resigned, their relationship was strained, and that Felt "exploded" when asked for permission to be identified in ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN. Felt hung up on Woodward, and many years passed before they spoke. In 2002, Woodward finally interviewed Felt, who remembered very little, and who we are told suffers from dementia. Woodward goes on to discuss the use of confidential sources by journalists and his own struggle to keep Deep Throat's identity secret. Woodward has been sitting on this information for decades, and the public has been anticipating the added dimension, flavor, and context that he brings to a history lesson that seems acutely relevant today.
| Size | | Length: | 249 pages | | Height: | 8.8 in | | Width: | 6.0 in | | Thickness: | 1.0 in | | Weight: | 15.2 oz |
Industry Reviews "THE SECRET MAN provides an intriguing if not fully satisfying portrait of the real-life relationship between Mr. Woodward and Mr. Felt, and it reaffirms the vital role that confidential sources play in keeping the public informed." New York Times - Michiko Kakutani (07/06/2005)
"THE SECRET MAN is a stirring, sometimes even moving book, a lucid footnote to ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN that, in its very stiffness and honorable refusal to push beyond facts into guesswork, reminds us that the world is remade by flawed, ordinary men as often as by heroes." Entertainment Weekly - Mark Harris (07/22/2005)
"Bob Woodward's latest book is the best short discussion of this distinction--between the reporter as private eye and the reporter as stenographer--that has ever been published....[T]he penultimate chapter, in which [Woodward] explains his adamant position on the protection of sources, is a passage that one hopes will be taught in schools. It exhibits real care and measure and scruple...." New York Times Book Review - Christopher Hitchens (07/24/2005)
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