5/1/2023 0 Comments An unfinished lifeThe book ends with an interesting “Epilogue” considering Kennedy’s reputation, assessing his legacy and briefly pondering what “might have been.” The most interesting chapters are those dealing with Kennedy’s relationship with Nikita Khrushchev (their meeting at the Vienna Summit, in particular) and the Bay of Pigs debacle. But this is reflective of Kennedy’s own interests and emphasis. With the exception of civil rights (where the author is often critical of Kennedy’s leadership failures), domestic issues receive significantly less focus. Not surprisingly, discussion of Kennedy’s presidency is dominated by US-Soviet relations, Cuba and Southeast Asia. More than half the book is reserved for Kennedy’s 1,036-day presidency and Dallek’s style is consistently serious, sober-minded and impressively objective. Once Kennedy begins his political career in 1946, the spotlight shines brightest on his “public” rather than “private” life his family recedes into the background and there is surprisingly little coverage even of Jackie. The author’s skillful dissection of JFK’s complex medical situation, however, does pervade the text. This biography is long on hard history and avoids allowing Kennedy’s indiscretions to hijack the narrative. While the early narrative provides a devastating indictment of Kennedy’s ill-formed moral core, Dallek is predisposed to focusing on politics over prurient predilections. Some of this fresh primary source material underpins the book’s earliest chapters which describe Kennedy’s youth: his fascinating family lineage, his privileged childhood, his persistent medical issues and his unwavering penchant for “womanizing.” But readers seeking a sensational JFK exposé are likely to be disappointed. Dallek also convinced a former Kennedy administration press aide to release new information concerning an affair between JFK and a White House intern. He is the author of nearly two-dozen books including a two-volume series on LBJ and “ Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power.”ĭallek was granted almost unprecedented access to Kennedy family documents including newly-revealed information relating to JFK’s seemingly endless array of medical ailments. Dallek is a presidential historian and former professor of history at Boston University, Columbia University and UCLA. ![]() Kennedy, 1917-1963” was the first full-scale, single-volume biography of JFK in over three decades. So just a little while later we have you both back to God.When it was published in 2003, Robert Dallek’s “ An Unfinished Life: John F. Your baby brother wanted to go too, but Mamma still had him on a machine. Your Daddy let Mamma hold you to my chest as you transitioned to an angel. I just wanted to make sure to give you God and peace. ![]() When Mellow told Mommy it was time to go, the doctor agreed. For a miracle it was, a question of what it would cost. Nothing could ever disguise the beautiful sons I had, however, I realized after a few days, a miracle is not what it seems. Mamma didn't know how hard it would be for your little souls. I demanded they give them a chance, "edge of viability and sorrow filled the room." My sons both took the breath required, life support, critical care, the nicu. They were born a miracle at 23 weeks gestation. His identical twin brother came with him, modest and his hand holding his mamma's thigh. My eldest son came with his arm held high to the sky. To give me the chance for a brand new start! To hold him and embrace the mere presence of him. Was I to learn something from this and just didn't get it? ![]() Was I being punished for a sin I committed? The sorrow and anguish down under just can't be explained. If that's true, then how can I feel this sad?ĭisbelief and uncertainty consume my brain ![]() Some say you can't lose something you never had. To lose someone so close, yet so far away. I'm sitting here mystified and numbed with pain
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