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An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy 1917-1963
 

An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy 1917-1963
written by Robert Dallek
Studio : Thorndike Press
by Thorndike Press
Publisher : Thorndike Press
Released : 2003-10-02
Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Number of Items : 1
EAN : 9780786257867
Avg. Customer Rating:(based on 78 reviews)

List Price : $32.95
Our Price : $147.17


Editorial Reviews for  'An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy 1917-1963'
 
Product Description
A #1 New York Times Bestseller

In a tale that stretches back to Ireland, An Unfinished Life describes the birth of the Kennedy dynasty, the complexity of Jack's early years, and the mixture of adulation and resentment that tangled his relationships with his mother, Rose, and his father, Joseph. An Unfinished Life also discloses for the first time that Kennedy was far sicker than we ever knew.

 
Customer Reviews for  'An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy 1917-1963'
 
American Politics: Red in Tooth & Claw
An extremely informative book. I came away from the book having only a little respect for Kennedy as a man or politician.

1) He accepted a Pulitzer Prize for a book that was almost entirely ghostwritten for him.

2) His daddy helped him cheat to win in elections and primaries.

3) His primary accomplishment as a Senator was keeping the seat warm for the next guy.

4) He, like at least one other President, lied about or withheld the truth about significant medical/physical problems.

5) He appointed his brother to post of Attorney General even though RFK was completely unqualified.

6) He treated his wife with blankfaced disrespect (openly philandering) in public and private.

7) He was primarily responsible for the Bay of Pigs fiasco which made him look weak and emboldened Cuba and the USSR, thus leading to the Cuban Missle Crisis which he handled surprisingly well.

8) He dragged his feet on Civil Rights because he was afraid of losing the support of Southern Democrats. (MLK Jr. said JFK's assassination was the best thing to happen to the Civil Rights movement)

9) He freely admitted his first year as President was a miserable failure.

10) He stepped up involvement in Vietnam without actually dealing with the problem. This forced Johnson and Nixon to make strategically terrible, morally insupportable and after-the-fact decisions.

He was good looking and well spoken. Even his fiercest detractors admit he gave a great speech. He had a beautiful and cultured wife and adorable kids (Camelot). He was intelligent and erudite. He did his duty in WW2. As the President, he meant well but was inexperienced, naive & hopelessly out of his depth in high level cut-throat politics and completely lacking in moral courage. He did at least listen to the Civil Rights leaders and proposed bare minimum legistation. He got the space program off the ground (so to speak). He started the Peace Corp. He stared down the bombastic Khrushchev and the belligerent Castro. He encouraged Americans toward volunteerism and thinking of America 1st and themselves 2nd. All in all, a failed half-presidency with a few points of light redeemed by his martyrdom and subsequent mythology.
 
Essential Reading But...
Robert Dallek is a gifted historian. He is also a complete historian, because he writes extremely well. I wonder if he has ever won the Parkman Prize, because his apparent meticulous research is consumed by the reader with such ease. Of course, because it is Dr. Dallek, I have but one complaint. In the young, Kennedy years, prior to the presidency, the biography feels intimate -- as if we were talking to someone who was right in the house growing up with him -- almost if we were like Lem Billings. But when we get to the presidency there is a bit of opinionating that oftimes goes from historian to editorializing. For example, when speaking of the Berlin Crisis, Dr. Dallek opines that it is best that JFK was running the show because RFK, being a hothead, might have gotten us involved in a nuclear exchange. Other than that minor, minor complaint, (because he is probably right on his opinionating), I think Dallek is great. So is his new title about Nixon, (and Kissinger,too.)

Joe Nichols
 
Adequate First Kennedy Biography
Thought that the book was an adequate one volume account of the life of JFK. The author talked alot about JFK's medical problems, more than I would have liked. He could have written a chapter about the medical problems JFK had with his stomach and back and about how the Kennedy's covered up those ailments during the run for the presidency and during the presidency.

But overall I thought that it was a very good book and would recommend to anyone who is reading their first Biography of Kennedy.
 
Very Impressive
I very much enjoyed this biography of JFK. It is very well written and exactly what you want in a biography. It has a very detailed account of his entire life, from birth, through school and his travels, and on to his time as President.

My only criticism is that for those of you who were not alive at the time of JFK (like me), you can get lost in many of the pages surrounding his Presidency. The author's accounts are so detailed, that I often found myself turning back in the book to refresh my memory about the many names and places that are referenced.

Other than that, I highly recommend this book. The accounts of his young life (the privilege, the travels, the women) are fantastically interesting. The accounts of his many illnesses were also well done, and news to me.

If you are like me and a big fan of biographies that start from the beginning and tell the whole story chronologically without leaving out a single detail, then this book is for you.
 
Well Done!
Well packed and arrived in a timely fashion. Everything as expected. A pleasure to do business with.
 
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