Jfk

Jfk
Author: Victor Lasky
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 135
Release: 1963
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OCLC:867777874

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J F K The man and the myth

J F K  The man and the myth
Author: Victor Lasky
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1963
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OCLC:1061885091

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JFK

JFK
Author: Victor Lasky
Publsiher: Crown
Total Pages: 653
Release: 1966
Genre: United States
ISBN: 0870000160

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J F K The man and the myth

J F K  The man and the myth
Author: Victor Lasky
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1963
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OCLC:1061885091

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John F Kennedy

John F  Kennedy
Author: Agnieszka Graff
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 142
Release: 2004
Genre: United States
ISBN: 8390584395

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The Kennedy Obsession

The Kennedy Obsession
Author: John Hellmann
Publsiher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 246
Release: 1999-03-19
Genre: History
ISBN: 0231515375

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John F. Kennedy was not only a president, but also a symbol for America's most cherished ideas. In The Kennedy Obsession, John Hellmann takes a thoroughly original approach to understanding Kennedy's star power and his carefully crafted public image. Tracing Kennedy's self-creation as diligent scholar, bashful hero, and sensitive rebel-cued by cultural figures such as Lord Byron, Ernest Hemingway, and Cary Grant-and the images of Kennedy in the aftermath of his assassination, Hellmann reveals the painstaking transformation of private life into public persona, of a man into perhaps the major American myth of our time.

Lennon

Lennon
Author: Tim Riley
Publsiher: Hachette Books
Total Pages: 809
Release: 2011-09-20
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781401303938

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In his commanding new book, the eminent NPR critic Tim Riley takes us on the remarkable journey that brought a Liverpool art student from a disastrous childhood to the highest realms of fame. Riley portrays Lennon's rise from Hamburg's red light district to Britain's Royal Variety Show; from the charmed naivetéf "Love Me Do" to the soaring ambivalence of "Don't Let Me Down"; from his shotgun marriage to Cynthia Powell in 1962 to his epic media romance with Yoko Ono. Written with the critical insight and stylistic mastery readers have come to expect from Riley, this richly textured narrative draws on numerous new and exclusive interviews with Lennon's friends, enemies, confidantes, and associates; lost memoirs written by relatives and friends; as well as previously undiscovered City of Liverpool records. Riley explores Lennon in all of his contradictions: the British art student who universalized an American style, the anarchic rock 'n' roller with the moral spine, the anti-jazz snob who posed naked with his avant-garde lover, and the misogynist who became a househusband. What emerges is the enormous, seductive, and confounding personality that made Lennon a cultural touchstone. In Lennon, Riley casts Lennon as a modernist hero in a sweeping epic, dramatizing rock history anew as Lennon himself might have experienced it.

JFK s Last Hundred Days

JFK s Last Hundred Days
Author: Thurston Clarke
Publsiher: Penguin
Total Pages: 448
Release: 2013-07-16
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781101617809

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A Kirkus Best Book of 2013 A revelatory, minute-by-minute account of JFK’s last hundred days that asks what might have been Fifty years after his death, President John F. Kennedy’s legend endures. Noted author and historian Thurston Clarke argues that the heart of that legend is what might have been. As we approach the anniversary of Kennedy’s assassination, JFK’s Last Hundred Days reexamines the last months of the president’s life to show a man in the midst of great change, finally on the cusp of making good on his extraordinary promise. Kennedy’s last hundred days began just after the death of two-day-old Patrick Kennedy, and during this time, the president made strides in the Cold War, civil rights, Vietnam, and his personal life. While Jackie was recuperating, the premature infant and his father were flown to Boston for Patrick’s treatment. Kennedy was holding his son’s hand when Patrick died on August 9, 1963. The loss of his son convinced Kennedy to work harder as a husband and father, and there is ample evidence that he suspended his notorious philandering during these last months of his life. Also in these months Kennedy finally came to view civil rights as a moral as well as a political issue, and after the March on Washington, he appreciated the power of Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., for the first time. Though he is often depicted as a devout cold warrior, Kennedy pushed through his proudest legislative achievement in this period, the Limited Test Ban Treaty. This success, combined with his warming relations with Nikita Khrushchev in the wake of the Cuban missile crisis, led to a détente that British foreign secretary Sir Alec Douglas- Home hailed as the “beginning of the end of the Cold War.” Throughout his presidency, Kennedy challenged demands from his advisers and the Pentagon to escalate America’s involvement in Vietnam. Kennedy began a reappraisal in the last hundred days that would have led to the withdrawal of all sixteen thousand U.S. military advisers by 1965. JFK’s Last Hundred Days is a gripping account that weaves together Kennedy’s public and private lives, explains why the grief following his assassination has endured so long, and solves the most tantalizing Kennedy mystery of all—not who killed him but who he was when he was killed, and where he would have led us.