In Nixon's Web: A Year in the Crosshairs of Watergate by L. Patrick Gray III, Ed Gray

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: March 2009
  • 352pp
  • Sales Rank: 328,305
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2009
    • Publisher: Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated
    • Format: Paperback, 352pp
    • Sales Rank: 328,305

    Synopsis

    The last untold story of Watergate—by the FBI director who maintained his silence for more than thirty years L.Patrick Gray III was the man caught in the middle of the Watergate scandal. He was a lifelong Republican, but Richard Nixon considered him a threat. Closing in on the conspiracy, Gray became the target of one of Watergate’s most shocking acts—Nixon’s “smoking gun” attempt to have the CIA stop the FBI investigation. And when the U.S. Senate focused its attention on Gray in April 1973, the White House threw him to the wolves; John Ehrlichman famously advised that he be left to “twist slowly, slowly in the wind.”

    This book is Gray’s firsthand account of what really happened during his crucial year as acting director of the FBI, based on a never-before-published first-person account and previously secret documents. He reveals the witches’ brew of intrigue and perfidy that permeated Washington, and he tells the unknown story of his complex relationship with his top deputy, Mark Felt, raising disturbing questions about the methods and motives of the man purported to be Deep Throat.

    Gray’s book was completed and expanded by his son, the journalist Ed Gray, who has supplemented the text with revelatory excerpts from documents, tape transcripts, and third-party accounts. Every other major figure has told his story, and now Patrick Gray’s unique inside account will change the way we think about the crisis that destroyed the Nixon presidency.

    Karl Helicher Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information - School Library Journal

    L. Patrick Gray III, acting director of the FBI from May 1972 to April 1973, resigned rather than go through confirmation hearings with no support from Nixon's White House. He had no chance of keeping his job once it was clear that he would not lie about Watergate to protect the beleaguered President. John Ehrlichman, Nixon's chief domestic adviser, also sandbagged Gray, ordering him to destroy incriminating documents from Watergate burglar Howard Hunt. Furthermore, Mark Felt, the self-acknowledged Deep Throat, believed that he should have been appointed FBI director and led a clique of the late J. Edgar Hoover's surviving loyalists, who opposed Gray. After resigning, Gray spent years clearing his name from charges related to Watergate. Here he shows his contempt for Nixon, H.R. Haldeman, John Dean, and Mark Felt in no uncertain terms. His son (founder, Gray's Sporting Journal) wrote the final chapters following his father's death in 2005. Relying on his father's carefully maintained records, Ed Gray faults Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's All the President's Menas more fiction than fact and concludes intriguingly that Mark Felt was not the only Deep Throat. Overall, this is a fast-paced, sometimes chilling insider's account of the desperate attempt to save a corrupt administration, without regard to whose lives were destroyed. Recommended for all public libraries.

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    Biography

    L. Patrick Gray III (1916–2005) was acting director of the FBI at the height of the Watergate scandal, from May 1972 to April 1973. He had previously served in the Justice Department as an assistant attorney general, and was a twenty-year veteran of the U.S. Navy. Ed Gray, his son, is a naturalist writer and the founder of Gray’s Sporting Journal. He is the author of seven books and lives in Lyme, New Hampshire.

    Customer Reviews

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    Pat Gray: the only beleagured innocent man of Watergateby Anonymous

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    July 24, 2008: A first hand account defending the innocence of a man that everyone judged guilty by association. In Nixon's Web you have a wonderful story of Gray thoughts of May 1972. Gray could see great possiblities for the future becoming Acting Director of the FBI on May 4. Almost a year later the possibilities were destroyed by an endless stream of betrayals by everyone in the White House and later the FBI, both he trusted explicity. It is appallingly appallying. In Nixon's Web you see an account that beckon's to ask, did anybody apologize to him? None of the betrayers had the guts to look him in the eye and say they were sorry. Not that it would have mattered but those people who ruined a big chunk of his life and had him perpetually defending himself in front of judges, committees of Congress and the press did nothing to rectify the situation. As is common with felons is the very sorry they were caught but not sorry they were committing the felony apology. Many of the conspirators went on to rationalize their behaviors as another way of justifying their wrongs. Having read the book, John Dean is three inches lower than whale dung. For him to call for Bush's impeachement is hypocrisy at its most blantant. That guy shouldn't be allowed to co-exist with the rest of America. He lied to Gray dozens of times when Gray was acting director of the FBI. It was a very exciting read.