NEW YORK TIMES EDITORS’ CHOICE • A Pulitzer
Prize–winning historian takes us as close as we have ever been to the
real John F. Kennedy in this revelatory biography of the iconic, yet
still elusive, thirty-fifth president.
“An utterly incandescent study of one of the most consequential figures of the twentieth century.”—Jill Lepore, author of These Truths: A History of the United States
NAMED BIOGRAPHY OF THE YEAR BY The Times (London)
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY The Sunday Times (London) • New Statesman • The Daily Telegraph • Kirkus Reviews
By
the time of his assassination in 1963, John F. Kennedy stood at the
helm of the greatest power the world had ever seen, a booming American
nation that he had steered through some of the most perilous diplomatic
standoffs of the Cold War. Born in 1917 to a striving Irish American
family that had become among Boston’s wealthiest, Kennedy knew political
ambition from an early age, and his meteoric rise to become the
youngest elected president cemented his status as one of the most
mythologized figures in American history. And while hagiographic
portrayals of his dazzling charisma, reports of his extramarital
affairs, and disagreements over his political legacy have come and gone
in the decades since his untimely death, these accounts all fail to
capture the full person.
Beckoned by this gap in our historical
knowledge, Fredrik Logevall has spent much of the last decade searching
for the “real” JFK. The result of this prodigious effort is a sweeping
two-volume biography that properly contextualizes Kennedy amidst the
roiling American Century. This volume spans the first thirty-nine years
of JFK’s life—from birth through his decision to run for president—to
reveal his early relationships, his formative experiences during World
War II, his ideas, his writings, his political aspirations. In examining
these pre–White House years, Logevall shows us a more serious,
independently minded Kennedy than we’ve previously known, whose distinct
international sensibility would prepare him to enter national politics
at a critical moment in modern U.S. history.
Along the way,
Logevall tells the parallel story of America’s midcentury rise. As
Kennedy comes of age, we see the charged debate between isolationists
and interventionists in the years before Pearl Harbor; the tumult of the
Second World War, through which the United States emerged as a global
colossus; the outbreak and spread of the Cold War; the domestic politics
of anti-Communism and the attendant scourge of McCarthyism; the growth
of television’s influence on politics; and more.
JFK: Coming of Age in the American Century, 1917–1956
is a sweeping history of the United States in the middle decades of the
twentieth century, as well as the clearest portrait we have of this
enigmatic American icon.
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