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

The Secret Man: The Story of Watergate's Deep Throat (Paperback)

by Bob Woodward (Author) "IN FEBRUARY 1992, AS THE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF the Watergate break-in approached, I went to the fortress-like J. Edgar Hoover FBI headquarters building on Pennsylvania..." (more)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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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 --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

Rushed into print after former FBI second-in-command W. Mark Felt was unmasked as Watergate's enigmatic arch-informant, this memoir reminds us that the scandal's lasting impact was less on politics than on journalism. Woodward recounts his cultivation of the avuncular Felt as mentor and source during his days as a cub reporter, the cloak-and-dagger parking garage meetings where Felt leaked conclusions from the FBI's Watergate investigation, Felt's ambivalence about his actions and the chilling of their post-Watergate relationship. The narrative drags in later years as the author showily wrestles with the ethics of revealing his source, even after a senile Felt begins blurting out the secret and his family pesters Woodward to confirm his identity. Woodward portrays Felt as a conflicted man with situational principles (he was convicted of authorizing the FBI's own Watergate-style illegal break-ins), motivated possibly by his resentment of White House pressure on the FBI for a cover-up, possibly by pique at being passed over for FBI chief. Unfortunately, Felt doesn't remember Watergate, so his reasons remain a mystery; Woodward's disappointment at the drying up of his oracle is palpable. What's clear is that Deep Throat laid the template for Woodward's career; his later reporting on cloistered institutions-the Supreme Court, the CIA, the Fed, various administrations-relied on highly-place, often unnamed insiders to unveil their secrets. It gave his reporting its omniscient tone, but, critics complain, drained it of perspective and made it a captive of his sources and their agendas. Woodward doesn't probe these issues very deeply, but he does open a window on the fraught relationships at the heart of journalism.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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IN FEBRUARY 1992, AS THE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF the Watergate break-in approached, I went to the fortress-like J. Edgar Hoover FBI headquarters building on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington. Read the first page
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1.0 out of 5 stars Poignant, yet unpersuasive and terribly sad memoir, Feb 23 2008
By M. J. Fenn (Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is Bob Woodward's most intensely personal and least convincing book about the Watergate aftermath. It is the story of his links with J. Mark Felt, Hoover's deputy at the FBI, who Woodward now says was his main source for the revelations about obstruction of justice and illegality which ultimately brought down President Nixon in August 1974.

The 'Reporter's Assessment' by his long-time collaborator, Carl Bernstein, fits somewhat oddly into this book.

Metaphorically the reader can almost weep to see the portrait of the J. Mark Felt as a kindly, paternal figure whom Woodward met in 1969 or -70 at the White House when Woodward was a naval intelligence aide, and who gave Woodward tips and friendly advice thereafter, culminating in his provision of salient FBI investigation parameters to Woodward as he and Carl Bernstein painstakingly put together the journalistic stories which the Watergate break-in provided.

For many years Felt lied about whether he was Woodward's source, and Woodward in this book admits lying about it as well.

For many years Woodward promised not to reveal his source's identity in his source's lifetime, or until his source released him from the obligation of confidentiality, according to journalistic ethics. Much is made of this in the book.

The standard of proof regarding Felt's putative release of Woodward from his obligation of confidentiality towards Felt is described by Woodward as 'voluntary, absolute and competently given permission' which Felt would have to give. Ben Bradlee, Woodward's former editor, is cited as generally agreeing with this standard. Woodward clearly states that he believed that because of Felt's dementia Felt was no longer in any fit state to give such a confidentiality waiver.

What happens next in the book is either baffling, or tragic, or both. We do not read much in the book itself about the quest for financial security which the Felt family went on record elsewhere as wanting, if Mark Felt would only admit he was Woodward's source. One is left wondering if Woodward, knowing full well the part which this factor seems to have played, couldn't bear to spell it out properly.

But what happened in 2005 seems so painful, in terms of the long-rehearsed dilemmas which Woodward makes a deliberate point of rehearsing. Woodward had already reestablished contact with Felt after a break of a number of years, and Felt, then in his 80s, had already demonstrated to Woodward that the onset of dementia had obliterated most of the details of the Watergate issues from his memory. One thing remained, the book shows Felt's abiding and trusting recognition of Woodward as a friend, when his dementia had obliterated memory of many of his former colleagues, friends and work-related facts and issues.

We have no way of knowing that the statement of Felt which his family and lawyer claim is authentic, is actually that. Clearly Woodward (and Bradlee maybe) have their doubts. It is as if Woodward himself cannot bring himself to explain in the book why the standard of proof which he expounds so eloquently was no longer relevant and as if he leaves it to Bernstein, who apparently has less of a sense of ethical dilemma, to report that Woodward's change of heart came at a time when the Washington Post became strongly committed to publishing.

This book has not sold well. We really don't know if Woodward expected it to be a publishing bonanza. If he ever did, he has been disabused of that notion.

The Mark Felt of the 1970s as J. Edgar Hoover's deputy, and as one whose strategy was to challege the Nixon White House administered by men such as Haldeman and Erlichman, didn't get there by being a shrinking violet. But in this book there remains to us a full-circle portrait of Felt as a courteous, kindly man who remembers Woodward, seems to regard him as a friend, while having lost nearly all recollection of what happened in the crucial years 1971 to -74.

Woodward does not come over well in this book; he seems to admit as much.

The appearances of illegalities in which every US President between FDR and Nixon engaged are arguably at least as bad as what Nixon did. This book, showing the way Watergate all began and the way it all ended, even as the aged Mr. Felt is still alive at the time of writing this review, makes one wonder whether Watergate was substantially a journalistic creation after all, despite the break-in, as the trust of an elderly former FBI man may have been betrayed according to the very ethical parameters which this book painstakingly explains but then inexplicably drops. Calvin Coolidge said that the business of America is business. From this book it seems that the tragedy of J. Mark Felt and his possible betrayal by the ambitious young naval aide and subsequently journalist whom he befriended fall within the tradition of all-American business as usual. Woodward is one of my favourite and trusted contemporary authors and I metaphorically weep for his reputation as a result of this book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars MUST READ!!!, Aug 6 2005
By mb1000 "mb1000" (Mississauga, ON Canada (Near Toronto)) - See all my reviews
This is one very interesting book. I would recommend it to anyone who has a basic knowledge of the Watergate scandal and would like to learn more. The book reviews some of the key points of Watergate, and includes detailed information on the role of Mark Felt, aka Deep Throat, in unravelling the scandal. Best of all, the book has detailed accounts of the secret meetings between author Bob Woodward and Mark Felt, and details their personal relationship, which existed for sometime before Watergate.
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