<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet type="text/css" media="screen" href="http://s2.wp.com/wp-content/themes/vip/newyorkobserver/stylesheets/rss.css"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	xmlns:georss="http://www.georss.org/georss" xmlns:geo="http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/wgs84_pos#" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Observer &#187; What&#8217;s That Choking Noise? Bob Woodward&#8217;s Self-Scrutiny</title>
	<atom:link href="http://observer.com/2005/07/whats-that-choking-noise-bob-woodwards-selfscrutiny/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://observer.com</link>
	<description></description>
	<lastBuildDate>Tue, 21 May 2013 23:33:03 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language></language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.com/</generator>
<cloud domain='observer.com' port='80' path='/?rsscloud=notify' registerProcedure='' protocol='http-post' />
<image>
		<url>http://1.gravatar.com/blavatar/dac0f3722a48a53be75eb06c0c4f5119?s=96&#038;d=http%3A%2F%2Fs2.wp.com%2Fi%2Fbuttonw-com.png</url>
		<title>Observer &#187; What&#8217;s That Choking Noise? Bob Woodward&#8217;s Self-Scrutiny</title>
		<link>http://observer.com</link>
	</image>
	<atom:link rel="search" type="application/opensearchdescription+xml" href="http://observer.com/osd.xml" title="Observer" />
	<atom:link rel='hub' href='http://observer.com/?pushpress=hub'/>
		<item>
				
		<title>What&#8217;s That Choking Noise? Bob Woodward&#8217;s Self-Scrutiny</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2005/07/whats-that-choking-noise-bob-woodwards-selfscrutiny/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Jul 2005 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2005/07/whats-that-choking-noise-bob-woodwards-selfscrutiny/</link>
			<dc:creator>Mark Feeney</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2005/07/whats-that-choking-noise-bob-woodwards-selfscrutiny/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/article_book_feeney.jpg?w=241&h=300" /><i>The Secret Man: The Story<br />
of Watergate's Deep Throat</i>,<br />
by Bob Woodward. Simon &amp; Schuster. 249 pages, $23.</p>
<p><i>The Secret Man</i>, Bob Woodward's absorbingly anticlimactic<br />
Deep Throat book, has two revelations to offer. One is small, though rather<br />
marvelous. The other—hidden in plain sight in the title—is bigger, if also<br />
highly diffuse and inconclusive.</p>
<p>Revelation<br />
No. 1 is that someone who wasn't supposed to know the identity of Deep Throat<br />
knew. And kept the secret for 29 years.</p>
<p>The<br />
rest of us have been wondering about Deep Throat since 1974 when he first<br />
popped up in Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's <i>All the President's Men</i>. Hal Holbrook's portrayal of him in the<br />
movie version two years later guaranteed iconic status for the secret source.<br />
“Follow the money,” he counseled Robert Redford's Woodward, a breathtakingly<br />
concise capturing of the essence of Watergate—as well as a sign of how<br />
political fact was already becoming pop-culture legend: The words, which<br />
appeared nowhere in the collected works of Messrs. Woodward and Bernstein, were<br />
the formulation of screenwriter William Goldman.</p>
<p>Pop-culture<br />
legend was also fast becoming pop-culture mania. For more than three decades, trying<br />
to unmask Deep Throat was a minor Washington cottage industry. “Minor” may not<br />
be quite accurate: Deep Throat Industries has always had an enviable P/E<br />
ratio—“P,” in this case, standing for “publicity.” (Witness NBC's hour-long<br />
prime-time special scheduled to coincide with the book's publication.)</p>
<p>Minor<br />
or not, Deep Throat Industries found itself unexpectedly acquired, as one might<br />
say, by Condé Nast on May 31, when news broke that the July issue of <i>Vanity Fair</i> contained an article<br />
headlined, “I'm the Guy They Called Deep Throat.” The guy was W. Mark Felt, the<br />
onetime No. 2 man at the F.B.I. and someone who'd long been thought a prime<br />
candidate for Deep Throat–hood (<i>Washingtonian</i><br />
magazine had fingered him as early as 1974).</p>
<p>No<br />
small part of the thickly encrusted lore surrounding Deep Throat was that only<br />
a handful of people could identify him. It was well known that, besides Messrs.<br />
Woodward and Bernstein, former <i>Washington<br />
Post</i> executive editor Ben Bradlee knew. Mr. Woodward relates that he'd also<br />
told both his wife and Mr. Bradlee's successor, Leonard Downie Jr. Somewhat<br />
sheepishly, he adds that Stanley Pottinger knew, too.</p>
<p>Stanley<br />
Who? Mr. Pottinger served as an assistant attorney general in the Ford<br />
administration. He was present one day in 1976 when Mr. Felt was testifying<br />
before a grand jury about break-ins he'd ordered in the early 70's at the homes<br />
of relatives of members of the radical Weathermen group. Mr. Felt airily<br />
mentioned that some people actually thought <i>he</i><br />
was Deep Throat. “Were you?” a grand juror asked. Suddenly looking stricken,<br />
Mr. Felt perjured himself—that is, he said no. An alert Mr. Pottinger, seeing<br />
at once what was up, whispered to the witness that if he wished, since the<br />
matter was “outside the bounds of our official investigation,” both question<br />
and answer could be expunged. A relieved Mr. Felt very much so wished, and at<br />
that moment Mr. Pottinger joined the board of Deep Throat Industries.</p>
<p>Still<br />
safely anonymous, Mr. Felt in 1978 flatly denied to <i>The Wall Street Journal</i> that he was Deep Throat: “I'm just not that<br />
kind of person,” he said (a denial wonderfully adamant in its vagueness). Mr.<br />
Woodward recalls thinking at the time, “Did he know who he was? Did I?” Note<br />
how the second sentence allows for two readings: Did Bob Woodward know who Mark<br />
Felt was—or who Bob Woodward himself was?</p>
<p>This<br />
is revelation No. 2: The Secret Man on display in <i>The Secret Man</i> is as much Bob Woodward as Mark Felt. No, more: Just<br />
as Mr. Felt helped Messrs. Woodward and Bernstein to reveal the intricacies of<br />
Watergate, so he now helps Mr. Woodward to reveal the intricacies of Bob<br />
Woodward. The resultant self-portrait “is not all that admirable,” he<br />
confesses. “I was pushy, secretive, I used Mark Felt and I lied.” A weirdly<br />
mechanical self-doubt plagues him as he keeps fretting over his relationship<br />
with Mr. Felt, like the ethical equivalent of a sick tooth. Watching him nag<br />
and probe and refuse to take no for an answer, one can see in good measure what<br />
makes him such an extraordinary reporter. What's so odd is that he himself is<br />
the object of all the nagging and probing and refusing.</p>
<p>Self-revelation<br />
isn't something one expects (or necessarily seeks) from Bob Woodward. As a<br />
fitting grace note, <i>The Secret Man</i><br />
includes an afterword from Carl Bernstein. With knowing fondness, Mr. Bernstein<br />
describes his former partner as “the staid man from the Midwest,” a disciplined<br />
overachiever “prone to complete his homework before it is due or even<br />
assigned.” Mr. Woodward long ago became the Joe Friday of big-foot American journalism,<br />
the dean of due diligence, using his unrivaled access to the inner sanctums of<br />
government and a just-the-facts approach to crank out a succession of<br />
best-selling books that manage to be both weighty and weightless, all-knowing<br />
and (insofar as they shrink from context or perspective) clueless. Not for<br />
nothing did Joan Didion famously dismiss him as the author of “books in which<br />
measurable cerebral activity is virtually absent.”</p>
<p>Well,<br />
the heart has its reasons reporting knows nothing of. “No longer the<br />
30-year-old reporter chasing the story,” Mr. Woodward writes, he had “naturally<br />
become more interested in motive.” <i>The<br />
Secret Man</i> might best be described as what does (or doesn't) happen when<br />
Joe Friday finds himself wanting to be Graham Greene. But motivation is a<br />
tricky business, and never more so than when the motivation is one's own. And<br />
even if exposing the whys and wherefores of Mr. Felt's actions had been Mr.<br />
Woodward's sole aim, there isn't all that much he could tell us: Their<br />
encounters were few and, invariably, for lack of a better term, other-directed.<br />
The young Bob Woodward was generally looking for one of two things: the goods<br />
on Richard Nixon or career advice. That's how they first met, one evening in<br />
late 1969 or early 70, on “the lower level of the West Wing,” as each cooled<br />
his heels waiting to meet with a higher-up. Mr. Woodward, then a Navy<br />
lieutenant, was delivering a package from the Pentagon. He struck up a<br />
conversation seeking guidance on his future … and barely three years later,<br />
there they were in late-night parking garages, the dark fields of the Republic<br />
updated, helping determine the outcome of our long national nightmare.</p>
<p>After<br />
Watergate, they spoke a few times on the phone—never comfortably. Mr. Woodward<br />
watched with mounting concern as Mr. Felt was convicted in 1980 of violating<br />
the civil rights of the Weathermen relatives whose homes were broken into.<br />
(President Reagan soon pardoned him.) The most extensive meeting between them<br />
came 20 years later—this is as close as <i>The<br />
Secret Man</i> comes to having a climax—when Mr. Woodward showed up unannounced<br />
at Mr. Felt's door, in Santa Rosa, Calif., and took him out to lunch. There<br />
were no hard feelings on Deep Throat's part, and Mr. Woodward was mightily<br />
relieved.</p>
<p>Unfortunately,<br />
there were hardly <i>any</i> feelings—or<br />
memories. By then, Mr. Felt was suffering from senile dementia. There's<br />
something at once painful and ludicrous in Mr. Woodward's repeated efforts to<br />
quiz his secret source about their shared past. <i>All the President's Men</i> keeps peeking out from the pages of <i>The Secret Man</i>, but in this regard the<br />
more resonant Woodward title is <i>Veil</i>,<br />
his 1987 book about C.I.A. covert activity during the Reagan years. <i>Veil</i> ended with Mr. Woodward slipping<br />
into the hospital room of the dying William Casey, former head of the C.I.A.,<br />
and trying to get him to admit he knew of the diversion of funds to the<br />
Nicaraguan contras. “I believed,” Casey says, “I believed,” before drifting off<br />
into sleep.</p>
<p>What<br />
did Deep Throat believe and when did he believe it? Mr. Woodward can never<br />
know, and it drives him crazy. And it's not just the larger issues of motive<br />
and rationale. Mr. Woodward can't determine—and, for the Watergate buff, this<br />
is the book's deepest disappointment—how Mr. Felt managed to spot the flag on<br />
Mr. Woodward's balcony that signaled a desire to meet, or how Mr. Felt got to<br />
Mr. Woodward's copy of <i>The New York Times</i><br />
to signal his own need for a meeting.</p>
<p>Excellent<br />
reporter that he is, Mr. Woodward sets out the various elements that might have<br />
moved Mr. Felt to be Deep Throat: jealousy that not he but L. Patrick Gray had<br />
been named J. Edgar Hoover's successor as F.B.I. director; revulsion over the<br />
misdeeds of the Nixon White House; a desire to protect the bureau and its<br />
Watergate investigation; a fundamental commitment to seeing justice done; and<br />
so on. What Mr. Woodward can't do—no one can now, not even Mark Felt—is work<br />
those elements into a coherent, fully nuanced moral portrait. It's both<br />
touching and exasperating to watch Mr. Woodward try—touching because he's<br />
striving for a degree of moral imagination otherwise lacking in his work,<br />
exasperating because he's so clearly incapable of succeeding.</p>
<p>The<br />
stumbling block isn't just Mr. Felt's dotage. It's the author's own implacable<br />
Woodwardness. Near the end of his book, he remarks on the frequent inability of<br />
insiders—White House insiders, he means, not media insiders like himself—to get<br />
at the truth of a political or historical situation. He adds that “at times,<br />
the journalist, the historian and even the novelist paints the fullest picture<br />
of an era.” “Even”? <i>Even</i>? Joe Friday<br />
might want to be Graham Greene, but he just can't bring himself to respect him.<br />
In his heart he's still just after the facts. And Deep Throat—both in his<br />
revealed identity and in his enduring cultural resonance—greatly transcends the<br />
facts.</p>
<p>Mark<br />
Felt may have understood that. Unlike Mr. Woodward, he had an artist's<br />
imagination. When Mr. Woodward called him two months before that impromptu<br />
lunch in Santa Rosa, the conversation was inconclusive. “I'll hang up,” Mr.<br />
Felt said, ending it. “And this closet door can be a closed door.” It's the<br />
single best line in the book, almost spookily good. Equally striking is the<br />
bold, sweeping “F” that Mr. Felt used to sign F.B.I. memos. Mr. Woodward reproduces<br />
it in the book: It's like the mark of Zorro, a Deep Throat ideogram,<br />
simultaneously assertive and inscrutable. <i>Pace</i><br />
Bob Woodward, we require a novelist to decode it.</p>
<p><i>Mark Feeney, a reporter<br />
with </i>The Boston Globe<i>, is author of</i> Nixon at the Movies: A<br />
Book about Belief <i>(University of Chicago<br />
Press).</i></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/article_book_feeney.jpg?w=241&h=300" /><i>The Secret Man: The Story<br />
of Watergate's Deep Throat</i>,<br />
by Bob Woodward. Simon &amp; Schuster. 249 pages, $23.</p>
<p><i>The Secret Man</i>, Bob Woodward's absorbingly anticlimactic<br />
Deep Throat book, has two revelations to offer. One is small, though rather<br />
marvelous. The other—hidden in plain sight in the title—is bigger, if also<br />
highly diffuse and inconclusive.</p>
<p>Revelation<br />
No. 1 is that someone who wasn't supposed to know the identity of Deep Throat<br />
knew. And kept the secret for 29 years.</p>
<p>The<br />
rest of us have been wondering about Deep Throat since 1974 when he first<br />
popped up in Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's <i>All the President's Men</i>. Hal Holbrook's portrayal of him in the<br />
movie version two years later guaranteed iconic status for the secret source.<br />
“Follow the money,” he counseled Robert Redford's Woodward, a breathtakingly<br />
concise capturing of the essence of Watergate—as well as a sign of how<br />
political fact was already becoming pop-culture legend: The words, which<br />
appeared nowhere in the collected works of Messrs. Woodward and Bernstein, were<br />
the formulation of screenwriter William Goldman.</p>
<p>Pop-culture<br />
legend was also fast becoming pop-culture mania. For more than three decades, trying<br />
to unmask Deep Throat was a minor Washington cottage industry. “Minor” may not<br />
be quite accurate: Deep Throat Industries has always had an enviable P/E<br />
ratio—“P,” in this case, standing for “publicity.” (Witness NBC's hour-long<br />
prime-time special scheduled to coincide with the book's publication.)</p>
<p>Minor<br />
or not, Deep Throat Industries found itself unexpectedly acquired, as one might<br />
say, by Condé Nast on May 31, when news broke that the July issue of <i>Vanity Fair</i> contained an article<br />
headlined, “I'm the Guy They Called Deep Throat.” The guy was W. Mark Felt, the<br />
onetime No. 2 man at the F.B.I. and someone who'd long been thought a prime<br />
candidate for Deep Throat–hood (<i>Washingtonian</i><br />
magazine had fingered him as early as 1974).</p>
<p>No<br />
small part of the thickly encrusted lore surrounding Deep Throat was that only<br />
a handful of people could identify him. It was well known that, besides Messrs.<br />
Woodward and Bernstein, former <i>Washington<br />
Post</i> executive editor Ben Bradlee knew. Mr. Woodward relates that he'd also<br />
told both his wife and Mr. Bradlee's successor, Leonard Downie Jr. Somewhat<br />
sheepishly, he adds that Stanley Pottinger knew, too.</p>
<p>Stanley<br />
Who? Mr. Pottinger served as an assistant attorney general in the Ford<br />
administration. He was present one day in 1976 when Mr. Felt was testifying<br />
before a grand jury about break-ins he'd ordered in the early 70's at the homes<br />
of relatives of members of the radical Weathermen group. Mr. Felt airily<br />
mentioned that some people actually thought <i>he</i><br />
was Deep Throat. “Were you?” a grand juror asked. Suddenly looking stricken,<br />
Mr. Felt perjured himself—that is, he said no. An alert Mr. Pottinger, seeing<br />
at once what was up, whispered to the witness that if he wished, since the<br />
matter was “outside the bounds of our official investigation,” both question<br />
and answer could be expunged. A relieved Mr. Felt very much so wished, and at<br />
that moment Mr. Pottinger joined the board of Deep Throat Industries.</p>
<p>Still<br />
safely anonymous, Mr. Felt in 1978 flatly denied to <i>The Wall Street Journal</i> that he was Deep Throat: “I'm just not that<br />
kind of person,” he said (a denial wonderfully adamant in its vagueness). Mr.<br />
Woodward recalls thinking at the time, “Did he know who he was? Did I?” Note<br />
how the second sentence allows for two readings: Did Bob Woodward know who Mark<br />
Felt was—or who Bob Woodward himself was?</p>
<p>This<br />
is revelation No. 2: The Secret Man on display in <i>The Secret Man</i> is as much Bob Woodward as Mark Felt. No, more: Just<br />
as Mr. Felt helped Messrs. Woodward and Bernstein to reveal the intricacies of<br />
Watergate, so he now helps Mr. Woodward to reveal the intricacies of Bob<br />
Woodward. The resultant self-portrait “is not all that admirable,” he<br />
confesses. “I was pushy, secretive, I used Mark Felt and I lied.” A weirdly<br />
mechanical self-doubt plagues him as he keeps fretting over his relationship<br />
with Mr. Felt, like the ethical equivalent of a sick tooth. Watching him nag<br />
and probe and refuse to take no for an answer, one can see in good measure what<br />
makes him such an extraordinary reporter. What's so odd is that he himself is<br />
the object of all the nagging and probing and refusing.</p>
<p>Self-revelation<br />
isn't something one expects (or necessarily seeks) from Bob Woodward. As a<br />
fitting grace note, <i>The Secret Man</i><br />
includes an afterword from Carl Bernstein. With knowing fondness, Mr. Bernstein<br />
describes his former partner as “the staid man from the Midwest,” a disciplined<br />
overachiever “prone to complete his homework before it is due or even<br />
assigned.” Mr. Woodward long ago became the Joe Friday of big-foot American journalism,<br />
the dean of due diligence, using his unrivaled access to the inner sanctums of<br />
government and a just-the-facts approach to crank out a succession of<br />
best-selling books that manage to be both weighty and weightless, all-knowing<br />
and (insofar as they shrink from context or perspective) clueless. Not for<br />
nothing did Joan Didion famously dismiss him as the author of “books in which<br />
measurable cerebral activity is virtually absent.”</p>
<p>Well,<br />
the heart has its reasons reporting knows nothing of. “No longer the<br />
30-year-old reporter chasing the story,” Mr. Woodward writes, he had “naturally<br />
become more interested in motive.” <i>The<br />
Secret Man</i> might best be described as what does (or doesn't) happen when<br />
Joe Friday finds himself wanting to be Graham Greene. But motivation is a<br />
tricky business, and never more so than when the motivation is one's own. And<br />
even if exposing the whys and wherefores of Mr. Felt's actions had been Mr.<br />
Woodward's sole aim, there isn't all that much he could tell us: Their<br />
encounters were few and, invariably, for lack of a better term, other-directed.<br />
The young Bob Woodward was generally looking for one of two things: the goods<br />
on Richard Nixon or career advice. That's how they first met, one evening in<br />
late 1969 or early 70, on “the lower level of the West Wing,” as each cooled<br />
his heels waiting to meet with a higher-up. Mr. Woodward, then a Navy<br />
lieutenant, was delivering a package from the Pentagon. He struck up a<br />
conversation seeking guidance on his future … and barely three years later,<br />
there they were in late-night parking garages, the dark fields of the Republic<br />
updated, helping determine the outcome of our long national nightmare.</p>
<p>After<br />
Watergate, they spoke a few times on the phone—never comfortably. Mr. Woodward<br />
watched with mounting concern as Mr. Felt was convicted in 1980 of violating<br />
the civil rights of the Weathermen relatives whose homes were broken into.<br />
(President Reagan soon pardoned him.) The most extensive meeting between them<br />
came 20 years later—this is as close as <i>The<br />
Secret Man</i> comes to having a climax—when Mr. Woodward showed up unannounced<br />
at Mr. Felt's door, in Santa Rosa, Calif., and took him out to lunch. There<br />
were no hard feelings on Deep Throat's part, and Mr. Woodward was mightily<br />
relieved.</p>
<p>Unfortunately,<br />
there were hardly <i>any</i> feelings—or<br />
memories. By then, Mr. Felt was suffering from senile dementia. There's<br />
something at once painful and ludicrous in Mr. Woodward's repeated efforts to<br />
quiz his secret source about their shared past. <i>All the President's Men</i> keeps peeking out from the pages of <i>The Secret Man</i>, but in this regard the<br />
more resonant Woodward title is <i>Veil</i>,<br />
his 1987 book about C.I.A. covert activity during the Reagan years. <i>Veil</i> ended with Mr. Woodward slipping<br />
into the hospital room of the dying William Casey, former head of the C.I.A.,<br />
and trying to get him to admit he knew of the diversion of funds to the<br />
Nicaraguan contras. “I believed,” Casey says, “I believed,” before drifting off<br />
into sleep.</p>
<p>What<br />
did Deep Throat believe and when did he believe it? Mr. Woodward can never<br />
know, and it drives him crazy. And it's not just the larger issues of motive<br />
and rationale. Mr. Woodward can't determine—and, for the Watergate buff, this<br />
is the book's deepest disappointment—how Mr. Felt managed to spot the flag on<br />
Mr. Woodward's balcony that signaled a desire to meet, or how Mr. Felt got to<br />
Mr. Woodward's copy of <i>The New York Times</i><br />
to signal his own need for a meeting.</p>
<p>Excellent<br />
reporter that he is, Mr. Woodward sets out the various elements that might have<br />
moved Mr. Felt to be Deep Throat: jealousy that not he but L. Patrick Gray had<br />
been named J. Edgar Hoover's successor as F.B.I. director; revulsion over the<br />
misdeeds of the Nixon White House; a desire to protect the bureau and its<br />
Watergate investigation; a fundamental commitment to seeing justice done; and<br />
so on. What Mr. Woodward can't do—no one can now, not even Mark Felt—is work<br />
those elements into a coherent, fully nuanced moral portrait. It's both<br />
touching and exasperating to watch Mr. Woodward try—touching because he's<br />
striving for a degree of moral imagination otherwise lacking in his work,<br />
exasperating because he's so clearly incapable of succeeding.</p>
<p>The<br />
stumbling block isn't just Mr. Felt's dotage. It's the author's own implacable<br />
Woodwardness. Near the end of his book, he remarks on the frequent inability of<br />
insiders—White House insiders, he means, not media insiders like himself—to get<br />
at the truth of a political or historical situation. He adds that “at times,<br />
the journalist, the historian and even the novelist paints the fullest picture<br />
of an era.” “Even”? <i>Even</i>? Joe Friday<br />
might want to be Graham Greene, but he just can't bring himself to respect him.<br />
In his heart he's still just after the facts. And Deep Throat—both in his<br />
revealed identity and in his enduring cultural resonance—greatly transcends the<br />
facts.</p>
<p>Mark<br />
Felt may have understood that. Unlike Mr. Woodward, he had an artist's<br />
imagination. When Mr. Woodward called him two months before that impromptu<br />
lunch in Santa Rosa, the conversation was inconclusive. “I'll hang up,” Mr.<br />
Felt said, ending it. “And this closet door can be a closed door.” It's the<br />
single best line in the book, almost spookily good. Equally striking is the<br />
bold, sweeping “F” that Mr. Felt used to sign F.B.I. memos. Mr. Woodward reproduces<br />
it in the book: It's like the mark of Zorro, a Deep Throat ideogram,<br />
simultaneously assertive and inscrutable. <i>Pace</i><br />
Bob Woodward, we require a novelist to decode it.</p>
<p><i>Mark Feeney, a reporter<br />
with </i>The Boston Globe<i>, is author of</i> Nixon at the Movies: A<br />
Book about Belief <i>(University of Chicago<br />
Press).</i></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2005/07/whats-that-choking-noise-bob-woodwards-selfscrutiny/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/article_book_feeney.jpg?w=241&#38;h=300" medium="image" />
	</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
