Secrets Audiobook By Daniel Ellsberg cover art

Secrets

A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers

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Secrets

By: Daniel Ellsberg
Narrated by: Daniel Ellsberg, Dan Cashman
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About this listen

At the height of a spectacular career that spanned four administrations, Daniel Ellsberg chose a new course he believed would land him in prison for the rest of his life. He smuggled out of his office a 7,000 page top-secret study of U.S. decision-making in Vietnam from 1945-1968, and leaked it to The New York Times.

How did the coldest of warriors come to turn against his own government? In Secrets, Ellsberg finally tells the full story.

Ellsberg provides a vivid eyewitness account of the two years he spent behind the lines in Vietnam as a State Department observer, an experience that profoundly altered his own political thinking. And he tells how the release of the Pentagon Papers set in motion a train of events that ultimately toppled a president and helped to end an unjust war.

Infused with the political passion and turmoil of the Vietnam era, Secrets is the memoir of a daring man, a story about what it takes to make a dramatic life-change in the context of moral challenge, an expose of Washington power politics, and a searing portrait of America at a perilous modern crossroads.

©2002 Daniel Ellsberg (P)2002 HighBridge Company
Americas Politicians Russia Vietnam War Military War Inspiring Thought-Provoking
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Critic reviews

"A remarkable and riveting story." (Publishers Weekly)
"The story is fascinating, and one that anyone interested in Vietnam should hear. Ellsberg has a gruff voice, and he gives a true measure of himself as he reads his story." (AudioFile)
"Ellsberg's deft critique of secrecy in government is an invaluable contribution to understanding one of our nation's darkest hours." (San Francisco Chronicle)

What listeners say about Secrets

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A truly amazing listen.

For those like myself whose youth was lived during the Vietnam/Watergate era, Ellsberg’s memoir provides invaluable insights from an eyewitness to history, and specifically to some of the most evil actions performed by members of the government of the United States. It is a must read by anyone interested in this tragic era.

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excellent supplement

The importance of certain domestic developments occasionally get lost in more scholarly and comprehensive histories of America’s Southeast Asian war. Ellsberg’s accessible memoir fills in the gaps.

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    5 out of 5 stars

Great book, informative and interesting

I agree completely with the previous review. The information is fantastic. As a gen X'er, I am a little young to have real knowledge of what was going on in LBJ, Nixon, Vietnam era. At first I thought the switch between Ellsberg as reader and the other reader, which happens several times, distracting, but as the book progressed I appreciated hearing some of it from the authors own lips. The other reader is very good. I really liked this book. I felt by the end that I had a good mental picture of what was going on in Vietnam, what the issues were, and why we ended up in such a mess.

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10 people found this helpful

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Truth & facts mattered at long last

Excellent having Ellsberg’s voice. This would be great for those too young to remember the earthquake that release of Pentagon Papers caused.
There’s more than I’d recalled esp going back to 1945 as start of Vietnam fight for independence.
This is great retelling without just a reading of entire PP. kudos to all involved.
Can’t help but think that today Nixon would get away with it all No senators would dare risk their careers— & imagine if J Edgar still ruled over fbi & nearly everything else.
The good news: Vietnam war finally ended after so many lies upon lies, decade after decade. So many of our boys dead. So many Vietnamese dead. For what.
May our nation under fact based reality & rule of law persevere.

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5 stars for an account of a 5-star fiasco

This book is engrossing. Even at this far removed distance in time, and despite of all we know about it, the details of this story are shocking. The presentation is impassioned and at the same time matter of fact and direct about the decades of presidential deception on Vietnam. E.g., Elsberg is listening to a President Johnson speech and notes his reaction and details the lies LBJ told in it. Four presidents lied about Vietnam. All of the four ignored the best advice from the military advisors on what it would take to "win": all the presidents did less but hoped that what they did would bring a resolution to the conflict. An excellent narrator, perfect for this book, Dan Cashman. The introduction and some of the chapters are narrated by the 70-something Daniel Ellsberg. It's a winner.

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Outstanding!!

What an amazing journey Daniel Ellsberg underwent. I consider him a hero, and appreciate what he went through to end the horrible war we should never have entered.

The narration by Dan Cashman was excellent, and the portions read by Daniel Ellsberg himself made the book so personal and an even richer experience.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

Insight to Vietnam War and US policies

Heading to Vietnam, I wanted to find a book that covered US politics in the region, some history, the Pentagon Papers if possible and anything else that might be of interest. I was lucky to find this book, because it covers all of these topics in intense detail. It's worth reading twice. And there are no other books on Audible at this time that cover this topic with such critical insight. Aside from the strange ding-dong chapter introductions, everything else is very good, including the narration. This author sounds great reading his own work- a rarity.

This book is also very interesting because Ellsberg discusses in great detail how he changed from a Cold Warrior to a Progressive person who learned over many years how to think for himself. He goes into exceptional detail about the Gulf of Tonkin, to which he was privy to Top Secret memos at the time of the supposed attacks.

This is a must-read for anyone who is interested in the Vietnam War, the US government's involvement and the many US administrations that kept the war going, and why.

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12 people found this helpful

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very in-depth analysis

this is a very well written and well told story of America's involvement in Vietnam. why we should have been there and why we should not have been there and what it took to get us the hell out of there

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Still Cogent Today

I was 9 years old when this started to unfold. It was never a topic they talked about in school - ever. And I sure feel like I, and the rest of the nation, lost out on an unparalleled educational opportunity. The entire exercise begs an ongoing debate over who broke the laws/rules in the best interest of the country.

The story, though read with a general sobriety, was nonetheless filled with moments of intensity - exactly what you'd hope for when hearing the story of someone knowingly breaking the law and throwing his career away in order to tell the American people what the "deciders" in government knew about Vietnam, and deliberately ignored, in its arrogant zeal to, well...., just in its zeal.

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Filling the cracks of history.

I could hardly stop listening. I’ve heard Daniel Ellsberg speak but during this telling, I put my own life into the story. Where was I and what was I doing. I’d organized against the war. I knew people who were in Vietnam or avoiding the draft. I worked for Eugene McCarthy. Thank you.

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