But what the CIA keeps secret in the name of national security is often merely an effort to hide that which would embarrass the agency itself -- even at the cost of denying peace of mind for the families and honor due the "nameless stars". In an extraordinary job of investigative reporting, Ted Gup has uncovered the identities, and the remarkable stories, of the men and women who died anonymously in the service of their country. In researching The Book of Honor, Gup interviewed over four hundred current and former covert CIA officers, immersed himself in archival records, death certificates, casualty lists from terrorist attacks, State Department and Defense Department personnel lists, cemetery records, obituaries, and tens of thousands of pages of personal letters and diaries. In telling the agents' stories, Gup shows them to be astonishingly complex, vibrant, and heroic individuals -- nothing like the suave superspies of popular fiction or the amoral cynics of conspiracy buffs. The accounts of their lives -- and deaths -- are powerful and deeplymoving, and in bringing them at long last to light, Gup manages to render an unprecedented history of covert operations at the CIA.