In the President's Secret Service: Behind the Scenes with Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect

In the President's Secret Service: Behind the Scenes with Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect

3.22 of 5 stars 3.22  ·  rating details  ·  1,900 ratings  ·  482 reviews
Never before has a journalist penetrated the wall of secrecy that surrounds the U.S. Secret Service, that elite corps of agents who pledge to take a bullet to protect the president and his family. After conducting exclusive interviews with more than one hundred current and former Secret Service agents, bestselling author and award-winning reporter Ronald Kessler reveals th...more
Hardcover, 288 pages
Published August 4th 2009 by Crown Archetype
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Ryn
I don't think this book should have been written. The author justifies breaking the code of silence in the form of a book by saying we deserve to know the real personalities of the presidents and their families since they are elected officials. Everyone has a right to privacy. With that being said the stories were interesting.
Political biased does play a part in this story with more consrervitive leanings. It also contains a lot of ranting about the administration of the secret service. I felt...more
Leon

Never before has a journalist penetrated the wall of secrecy that surrounds the U.S. Secret Service. After conducting exclusive interviews with more than one hundred current and former Secret Service agents, bestselling author and award-winning reporter Ronald Kessler reveals their secrets for the first time.

• George W. Bush’s daughters would try to lose their agents.
• Based on a psychic’s vision that a sniper would assassinate President George H. W. Bush, the Secret Service changed his motor

...more
Susan
"In the President's Secret Service: Behind the Scenes with Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect" looked like a juicy read, and a lot of it was. As the cover states, it takes you "behind the scenes with agents in the line of fire and the presidents they protect."

What did I learn? Lyndon Johnson was a real character - quirky, nasty to others, a womanizer. Nixon was odd. Ford was a gentleman, Carter was absolutely awful and not who his public persona suggested. Reagan was a ge...more
Carole Tremblay
From the assassination of Lincoln to Kennedy’s fateful trip to Dallas, author/journalist Kessler plunges the reader into the super-charged atmosphere of the President’s Secret Service. No more secret are the code names and the personal foibles of people the public thought they know well.

But this non-fiction book is not just a page-turning “kiss and tell” story of the unofficial dallying of recent presidents and the silent collusion between agents and “protectees”. It is the result of extensive i...more
Tony
IN THE PRESIDENT’S SECRET SERVICE: Behind the Scenes With Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect. (2009). Ronald Kessler. ***.
I usually find that with a title this long, you usually don’t need to read the book. In this case, I was almost right. The author is a former reporter for both the ‘Wall Street Journal’ and ‘The Washington Post,’ and the author of several previous books. He was apparently on good terms with many of the agents who were members of the Secret Service and...more
Manny
Very interesting book on the "inside" of the Presidency. I was shocked at how the presidents passed and present were very different than their public persona. It was equally, if not more shocking, the opulence this person and his family lives in during their term as POTUS. Albeit ONE of the highest positions in the representative republican government we live in, the POTUS lives a life that can only be envied by royalty. This sadly is much of the driving force behind most of the candidates as of...more
Lightreads
An interesting and important book written by the absolute wrong person. There's all this great history of the Secret Service, assassinations thwarted and succeeded, criminal investigations, a scathing indictment of service management and how it treats its people.

…And then the other half of the book is gossip about protectees. Because, yes, okay, he acknowledges the Secret Service has a code of silence so that protectees will trust them, which is important for maintaining safety. But telling the...more
Jane
This was a very interesting book. It was written with the cooperation of the Secret Service. The author interviewed over one hundred current and former agents and directors. Many interesting tidbits are included about the 'protectees' .... Presidents, first family members, etc. There are candid comments about what the personal and security details thought of their protectees. Some were well liked, other were not; some were punctual, others not and examples or stories are related to illustrate ea...more
Iskandar Muydinov
It was fascinating to learn more about private lives of Presidents, but the way it was written makes you wonder how biased the author is . Personally I consider myself as independent and I still think that as an author you should keep the distance in painting the personal lives without any politically rich colors, just why can't we have it as black and white?!
So, before even starting the book which really starts great with history of the Secret Service, you should find out who Ronald Kessler is...more
J
Very interesting for non-fiction. I read it in one day.

Reading about the private lives of presidents was interesting, but it felt wrong to get the information confidentially from secret service agents. Even if I accept Kessler's premise that the public has a right to know about the private lives of politicians, I don't think they have a right to know it from the Secret Service. Those guys (and gals) need to keep their mouths shut. The truth can leak out from other sources. They shouldn't violate...more
Will Byrnes
Kessler offers two stories here. One is a protect-and-tell in which he lets the reader in on how many of the presidents, first ladies, and others who are protected by the Secret Service, behave in private. It is not at all graphic but reaffirms some notions we have of protectees and counters the image we might have of others. The personal unpleasantness portrayed is matched by nearly as many favorable portraits.

Kessler is a died-in-the-wool conservative, and this comes across. He clearly worshi...more
Rebecca
I rarely watch the interviews on THE DAILY SHOW anymore because most of them are boring to me and I have like no attention span for that anymore. But for some reason back in July or August, I actually sat through one and it was kind of interesting. It was the author to this book and some of the dish he gave on the show sounded interesting, so I added it to my library queue and I finally got the book about 2 weeks ago. Oy, SO BORING! All the good goss he said on the show, there was nothing really...more
Kay
I did enjoy this book on the 'inner workings' of the Secret Service. With the cooperation of the Secret Service, interviews from past and present agents gave us a small look at the different Presidents, their families and other political figures they have protected. Starting with Kennedy there's something about each president along with some Vice Presidents, a few Presidential candidates and a few of the Cabinet members of President Bush. [Tom Ridge comes across poorly] The author also relates h...more
Jeremy
How do I describe a book in which some of the substance was interesting yet was so poorly written? While there were some interesting stories about presidents and other protectees, most of the material is simply gossip from disgruntled agents. I'm sure Kessler believes he's writing some kind of scandalous expose, but really he's just regurgitating the universal complaints that go with the territory of federal civil service. The technical chapters are terribly boring and stylistically, the book is...more
Geri Spieler
Feb 10, 2010 Geri Spieler rated it 1 of 5 stars Recommends it for: No one. It is not well written or well researched
Recommended to Geri by: Part of my book review assignments
In the President’s Secret Service: Behind the Scenes with Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect
by Ronald Kessler
(Crown Publishers, November 2009)
The people who serve in the United States Secret Service seem to live in an alternate universe. They stand erect, almost motionless and devoid of any facial expression. Their astringent demeanor is all that is necessary to broadcast their purpose for being who they are, why they are, where they are.
These are men and women who rep...more
John Min
This here book's a real page turner. Amazing look at the protected (President, VP's, First family members) from the agents perspective. Starts out with a history of the Secret Service that is fascinating from page one and continues with assasinations and attempts, the lives and personas of the protected and what it takes to secure the President. They talk about the equipment, logistics and the manpower it takes for the President to travel. He finishes with a look at the problems facing the Secre...more
Alyce (At Home With Books)
I read In the President's Secret Service while riding in the car on vacation with my husband. He can always tell when I am finding a book to be interesting because I will stop every few pages and tell him little tidbits from the book. So that's what I did for our entire drive while reading this book (which I'm sure drove him crazy).

Most of what I knew about the Secret Service prior to reading this book had been gleaned from watching episodes of The West Wing, and movies such as In the Line of Fi...more
Alisa
Dec 22, 2009 Alisa rated it 4 of 5 stars Recommends it for: Any one who wants their eyes opened.
Really interesting (and worthwhile) read. Besides all the facts and interesting stories about the Secret Service itself, there is a plethora of interesting - and often infuriating - stories about the presidents they served. I'm one of those who think these stories should (and need to be) told. Why should we venerate men who treat their servants like crap, mock the people who elected them to office, and generally break every moral commitment that exists? It didn't surprise me to discover that Hil...more
Michael Stockbridge
This book takes a look into the history of the secret service and the issues they've faced in the past and issues they face today in the age of "terrorism".

Although some of the stories regarding previous assassination attempts were interesting, overall I wasn't too impressed with the book. It is way too much of an expose of how our past presidents and their first families have acted behind closed doors. I still can't decide if this is something we need to know or rather just makes for another s...more
Zach
Pretty good. Though not exactly what I expected. Much of the book provide's "insider accounts" about the private lives of Presidents, their families, and other VIPs. Some of the stories are interesting, others come across as nasty back biting (this is not helped by that fact that most of the sources are anonymous, that is understandable to some extent, but in some cases it raises the appearance of back biting against a former boss).

Unlike similar books about govt. agencies and law enforcement (...more
Robin
Parts of this book were so good I didn't want to put it down. Yet, there were some parts that were so boring I skimmed the pages. There were some good insights into the Secret Service, and the history of the organization was wonderfully done. But, at times, the book took on a gossipy tone which, while fun to read, didn't really add much to the core content. On the other hand, that is probably what will move books because we have an unquenchable thirst for gossip about....well, everyone.

What I f...more
Nena
Audiobook:

Even though it seems somehow wrong or improper for a secret service member to be talking to a reporter for the purpose of writing a tell-all about the White House past and present, I could not resist reading this book.

Part of it reads like a gossipy expose' while the other part of it talks about the inner workings of the Secret Service Department and its current shortfallings. Apparently due to lack of funding and antiquated, old-school ideas on the part department heads, the members...more
Carolyn
I like gossip, and that's mostly what this book is: what the Secret Service agents have thought of the people they've protected. Who treated them with respect and kindness: the Kennedys, Reagan, Ford, Bush 41 and 43 and their wives (Laura Bush the top favorite), Rove, Cheney, Clinton, and the Obamas. Who treated them as servants: LBJ, Carter; or as trash: Nixon, Hillary. Who was most demanding: Nancy Reagan or Hilary. Who tried to escape from them: just about all the presidential children except...more
Cruton
I am not quite sure what I was expecting with this book, regardless however the majority of the first half of the book is in essence White House gossip. I found this to be hugely entertaining. Seeing how former presidents were behind the scenes including how all of them seemed to have boat loads of women waiting in the wings for them was awesome.
It was also interesting to get a sense of how the Secret Service operates and evaluates threats. You think everything goes so smoothly from the outside...more
Jeff
I listened to this in audiobook format in a little over a week.

The book challenged my view of the Secret Service. For each account of brave heroism like stopping the assassination attempt on Reagan, the author (Kessler) painted sad stories like the Washington police agent who went out to get a drink while Lincoln watched his last play to modern stories of orders to turning off magnetometer screening after buckling to pressure to let more people into a Bush 43 event.

In the early part of the book,...more
Jordan
In the President’s Secret Service is full of all of the juicy details you’d expect. There are many surprising tidbits about each President who was protected by the secret service. Who were these men when the cameras turned off and the public was out of ear shot? How did they treat those who surrounded them in the White House?

More than just a tell-all, this book explains the training and expectations of the Secret Service. Would you have what it takes to give your life to protect the President?...more
Jess
This book was full of gossipy stories and tidbits about every president since Kennedy. While I found these stories interesting, I am puzzled by the integrity of Kessler's sources as he emphasizes the need for the Secret Service to keep the trust of the first families yet those who have relayed the stories to him have violated that basic tenant. I don't know that a SS agent for Kennedy or Johnson would feel that the knowledge they protect about those families is still priviledged today, and it ma...more
Jamie
The humongous, full title of this book by Ronald Kessler is "In the President's Secret Service: Behind the Scenes with Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect." And as the title suggests, it aims to tell the secret story of the equally secret service, gleaned by meticulous research, high quality reporting, cross-referencing each story with multiple sources, and maintaining a tone of level headed objectivity without taking sides.

Ha ha, no. Seriously. No. While it's true that Ke...more
Fucito21
The book "In The President's Secret Service: Behind the Scenes with the Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents they Protect, by Ronald Kessler, was an interesting book, but it did have cons to it. I was very excited to read it and it turned out to be a book that I really did not enjoy reading. One of the things that puzzles me the most is the fact that Kessler emphasizes the need for the Secret Service to keep the trust of the first families yet the agents who are relaying all of these st...more
Chris
Early on in the book, the author talks about how Secret Service agents "observe everything that goes on behind the scenes" but they must not reveal this to anyone, citing a phrase from their credentials about being worthy of trust and confidence.

The rest of the book is full of stories and quotes from agents who, evidently, were not worthy of it.

The entire book read like a gossip blog, more or less. There are some law-enforcement stories, but it's mainly a hodgepodge of lewd behavior, agents acti...more
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In the President's Secret Service: Behind the Scenes with Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect (Paperback)
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