Forty ways to look at JFK

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387 pages 2005

About This Book

"Statesman and hero, opportunist and fraud. John F. Kennedy's contradictions have inspired such fascination that the public's interest in him has never dimmed. Now, Gretchen Rubin has written a new work that captures the crucial elements of Kennedy's story."

"Rubin's "forty ways" approach highlights JFK's high ideals, trenchant wit, glamorous family, and unforgettable charisma; it also examines his astonishing sexual appetite, his lies to the public, his shrewd manipulation of the press, and his exploitation of imagery. By showing the many sides of JFK - ranked by the public, but not historians, as one of America's greatest presidents - Rubin invites readers to decide whether Kennedy was a great statesman or a shallow charmer; whether his success was due to his own merits or to his ruthless father; whether he could be both an unfaithful husband and a good man."

"Most important, this biography seeks to solve the enduring puzzle about JFK: What made Kennedy Kennedy? What made him such a dazzling, unforgettable figure? How did he become a secular saint, a political movie star? Rubin illuminates Kennedy's provocative character and explains the source of his enduring magic as not even the most exhaustive JFK studies have managed to do."--Jacket.

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