Last year, when nobody else was writing about Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers, best-selling author Ronald Kessler was in his book "A Matter of Character: Inside the White House of George W. Bush."

Albeit, Kessler was writing about how little was known of Miers - or for that matter, anybody else toiling in the Bush White House.

"Reporters reacted with stunned disbelief when Bush said he wasn't watching TV for news on the war in Iraq," recalls the author. "At a press conference on Dec. 12, 2003, Fox TV correspondent Wendell Goler asked Bush, 'Mr. President, in light of the New York Times editorial today, tell me why?'

"'Let me stop you, Wendell,' Bush said. 'I don't read those editorials.'"

"Bush's aides made the point that not everyone reads the Washington Post and the New York Times," Kessler says. "Rather, the Bush people were like antimatter: rather than having the normal inclination to feed their egos by garnering attention, they had the opposite orientation and were nearly impervious to press criticism."

Margaret Spellings, then assistant to the president for domestic policy (now education secretary), observed in the book: "The press office and I have a deal. They don't do policy, and I don't do press. You never see Harriet Miers' name in the paper." Harriet who?

The remark gave Kessler impetus to write everything he could learn about Miers, from her days in Texas and arrival at the White House - in her first job, "she controlled the paper flow to the president, making sure that briefing papers submitted to him were clearly written and timely and presented all sides of the issues" - to her last position as White House counsel.

Calling her petite and soft-spoken, the author wrote that "she applied discipline even-handedly, telling aides that they had not gotten their papers in on time or had written a magnificent paper, but it was not tight enough or did not have a bottom line."

Then, when the time came for former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer to announce Miers' appointment as deputy chief of staff, "a reporter had to ask how to spell her name."

"She doesn't want to be in the paper," Spellings said at the time of Miers. "She's all about the president. Will people think she is important and in the know for her next gig? I can tell you she is and she is."

Little did Kessler know that next gig would be as nominee to become a Supreme Court justice.