Bob Woodward is an associate editor at The Washington Post where he has worked for 49 years and reported on every American president from Nixon to Trump. He has shared in two Pulitzer Prizes, first for the Post’s coverage of the Watergate scandal with Carl Bernstein, and second 20 years later as the lead Post reporter for coverage of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
'In the worldwide capital of leaks and anonymous dishing that is
Washington, secrets can be almost impossible to keep. But somehow
over the past 19 months, the fact that America’s most famous
investigative journalist was quietly chipping away at a book that
delves into the dysfunctions of President Trump’s White House
remained largely unknown.'
*The Washington Post*
'Senior officials, acting as lone wolves concerned with preserving
their own reputations, spoke to Woodward on their own — with some
granting him hours of their time out of a fear of being the last
person in the room to offer his or her viewpoint. As one former
administration official put it: "He hooked somebody, and that put
the fear of God in everyone else." Another former official
added: "It’s gonna be killer. Everyone talked with
Woodward.”'
*Politico*
'Donald Trump is about to get the Bob Woodward treatment.'
*CNN*
'He has an extraordinary ability to get otherwise responsible
adults to spill [their] guts to him . . . his ability to get people
to talk about stuff they shouldn’t be talking about is just
extraordinary and may be unique.'
*Robert Gates, former director of the CIA and Secretary of Defense,
on Woodward*
'I think you’ve always been fair.'
*President Donald J. Trump, in a call to Bob Woodward, August 14,
2018*
'The sheer weight of anecdotes depicts a man with no empathy
and a pathological capacity for lying.'
*The Financial Times*
'Fuelling his narrative is an astonishing cast of rogues,
ideologues, self-made millionaires and men in uniform who have
spent the past two years in and out of Trump's administration.'
*The Sunday Times*
'In Woodward’s meticulous account of office intrigues, the
president’s men don’t seem to be trembling with fright. What
they mostly feel is contempt for Trump or pity for his ignorance
and the “teenage logic” of his obsessively vented grievances.'
*The Observer*
'Horribly fascinating. Strongly recommended. If you can bear
it.'
*Richard Dawkins*
'To me the standout message from the book . . . is that the
president is a bit clueless, a bit vain, a bit dangerous even; but
his people are utterly at sea . . .’
*The Times*
'He is the master and I'd trust him over politicians of either
party any day of the week.'
*New York Times*
'His work has been factually unassailable . . . In an age of
"alternative facts" and corrosive tweets about "fake
news", Woodward is truth’s gold standard.'
*The Washington Post*
'Fear depicts a White House awash in dysfunction, where
the Lord of the Flies is the closest thing to an owner's
manual.'
*The Guardian*
'I wonder how many journalists have arrived in Washington over the
years dreaming of becoming the next Bob Woodward . . . Though his
books are often sensational, he is the opposite of sensationalist.
He’s diligent, rigorous, fastidious about the facts, and studiously
ethical. There’s something almost monastic about his method . . .
He’s Washington's chronicler in chief.'
*BBC*
'I’ve been on the receiving end of a Bob Woodward book. There were
quotes in it I didn’t like. But never
once – never – did I think Woodward made it up.
Anonymous sources have looser lips and may take liberties. But
Woodward always plays it straight. Someone told it to
him.'
*Ari Fleisher, White House Press Secretary for George W. Bush*
‘As special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe into the murky 2016
election that brought Trump to power moves towards a
likely-to-be-sensational finale, Fear will help you discuss the
inevitable crisis intelligibly.’
*Daily Mail*
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