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Bobby and J. Edgar: The Historic Face-Off Between the Kennedys and J. Edgar Hoover That Transformed America
 
 
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Bobby and J. Edgar: The Historic Face-Off Between the Kennedys and J. Edgar Hoover That Transformed America [Hardcover]

Burton Hersh (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 1, 2007
The history of one of the most admired (Bobby Kennedy) and one of the most reviled (J. Edgar Hoover) are entwined with that of Joseph Kennedy. This triumvirate was marked by conflict, betrayal and a strange Shakespearean familial bond. Set against the ongoing context of Joe Kennedy's behind-the-scenes manipulation of key players in Congress, organized crime, and his own family, major players are revealed such as Roy Cohn, Martin Luther King, Marilyn Monroe, Lyndon Johnson, and Richard Nixon.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Historian and journalist Hersh (The Old Boys) might well have titled his excellent book "Collision Course," for that is exactly what J. Edgar Hoover and the Kennedys were on from as early as the 1930s. The many tensions between Bobby (as both attorney general and senator) and the power-hungry FBI director are well known. What Hersh brings to the party is important new research and intensive analysis revealing the complex background attendant to the confrontations of the 1960s. The third party to RFK's and Hoover's sparring was Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., whose long history of professional affiliations with such gangsters as Johnny Rosselli, and amorous flirtations with the likes of Gloria Swanson, swelled one of Hoover's secret files and (like JFK's peccadilloes) did much to complicate dealings with "the Director." Joe's past still overshadowed everything when in December 1961 the father was incapacitated by a stroke, leaving his boys to deal with an FBI head who secretly despised not only the father but his brood. On this stage, in a drama populated by such fascinating and contradictory characters as Roy Cohn, Martin Luther King Jr., Jimmy Hoffa and mob boss Carlos Marcello, Hersh reveals the ways of power, deceit and survival-of-the-fittest in Kennedy-era D.C. (June 1)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Formerly a journalist who covered politicians such as the Kennedys in their prime, Hersh here circles the relationship between FBI totem J. Edgar Hoover and his nominal boss, Attorney General Robert Kennedy. Writing in slang-slinging style, Hersh's wise-guy prose should amuse connoisseurs of the skeletons in Kennedy closets. Rattling bone after bone, Hersh sweeps along chronologically, compiling the monetary and salacious scandals that Hoover assiduously collected. Patriarch Joseph Kennedy is prominent in Hersh's rendition of the family story, specifically his alleged connections with mobsters. Marinating in the stories drawn from the vast Kennedy literature, Hersh opines that RFK's anti-Mob crusade lay behind the assassination of JFK, whom the blackmailing Hoover, in any event, had the goods on due to presidential assignations stuffed in his much-feared files. Amid the anecdotal avalanche, which includes RFK's supposed dalliance with Marilyn Monroe during her death spiral, Hersh does emphasize RFK's personal maturation and liberal inflections, thereby giving a bite to fans of Camelot while feeding a full meal to its skeptics. Taylor, Gilbert

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 624 pages
  • Publisher: Basic Books; First edition (June 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0786719826
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786719822
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.3 x 2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #909,646 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Burton Hersh Literary Background

After a rousing undergraduate career at Harvard, during which he won the History and Literature Prize, the top Bowdoin Prize, and graduated Phi Beta Kappa, Burton Hersh pushed off into a life as a professional writer animated by occasional triumphs and more or less constant controversy. After college he spent a year in the Black Forest as a Fulbright student, then a stint in the military as a radio operator along the Czech border and a high-clearance German translator and intelligence specialist for the Seventh Army. Then, newly married, he moved to the Austrian Alps and wrote his still - fortunately - unpublished first novel.

He returned to the United States in 1961 just as John F. Kennedy was taking over the presidency. Throughout the subsequent decade he specialized in well-paid magazine articles on skiing, culture and politics for a variety of magazines from Horizon to Esquire. After four years in New York and New Haven he wrote his first published novel, The Ski People, and the widely anthologized Esquire piece on the fledgling Senator Kennedy, whose life would generate three books by Hersh over the next four decades.

The first, The Education of Edward Kennedy, with its moment-to-moment breakdown of the events surrounding the Chappaquiddick cookout, was regarded by right-wingers as a whitewash of Kennedy's stumbling performance that terrible evening. The book was followed up by the bestselling The Mellon Family and, in 1992, after a decade of massive interviewing and research, The Old Boys: The American Elite and the Origins of the CIA. Bitterly resented inside the Agency for spilling all its secrets though cherished by the likes of John Le Carre, the group biography is now required reading for every incoming officer and in evidence on most desks at Langley, its institutional history.

In 1997 Hersh published The Shadow President, a treatment of Kennedy's subsequent twenty-five years that drew raves from critics from Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. to Tom Wicker to Daniel Schorr. A novel, The Nature of the Beast, that explored the ethical substructure of the CIA and was widely praised by critics up to the Agency's own Inspector General, came out in 2003. In 2007 a book that came out of a whole career of journalistic, social, and at times political involvement with the Kennedys and explored the secret family connections to the underworld that undoubtedly led to Jack Kennedy's assassination, Bobby and J. Edgar, brought down a tsunami of attacks from both the left and the right. Insults - but nothing specific ever to refute the details of who killed JFK and how - have poured in ever since from ignorant commentators.

In 2010 a thoroughly edited and much expanded and updated version of the two previous books on Edward Kennedy came out, Edward Kennedy: An Intimate Biography, and was generally hailed as definitive on Kennedy's life and career. It contained the ins and outs of the very nearly lethal vendetta between Kennedy and Richard Nixon and the reminiscences of the woman who had been Kennedy's great love during the most trying years of his middle life.

Much additional detail is available on Burton Hersh's website, www.treefarmbooks.com. He vents his opinions on a more or less weekly blog, What's Left Out: http://burtonhersh.blogspot.com/ Keep reading!


 

Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
5 star:
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

18 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Dark Side of Camelot, June 27, 2007
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This review is from: Bobby and J. Edgar: The Historic Face-Off Between the Kennedys and J. Edgar Hoover That Transformed America (Hardcover)
The New Frontier was led by men of vision and intelligence. But as Hersh points out in this page turner, the guys in the boiler room were as corrupt and conflicted as they could be. More so than any book I have yet read on the subject, "Bobby and J. Edgar" lays out how the Kennedy administration, the CIA, the mob, the FBI, and the Cuban exiles closely interacted. The missions were to fight organized crime, to fight communism. We are left to decide for ourselves if this machine ultimately turned on the Kennedy brothers, but the players, their motivations, and their means, are nicely laid out by Hersch.

What I found remarkable about the book was its density. Facts upon new facts pulled me to the next page, all annotated in his extensive notes section. Yes, not all of them may be true (and God, I hope the Giancana/Marilyn Monroe story is one of them), but the overall picture holds: The Kennedys fearlessly attacked the same power structures they at other times relied on. These malignant power structures cooperated with one another, usually without the Kennedy's knowledge or approval. The Kennedy's efforts to control this beast was probably their fatal mistake
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Booby and J. Edgar is the Story of TWO CATEGORY FIVE HURRICANES Colliding Together - Here is Their Story- Five Stars !!!!, December 6, 2010
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It reads like a novel. You finish one chapter and you cannot wait until the next. Soon the whole book is done, and you're wondering if there's a sequel. Writing doesn't get any better than this, and then there's the unequalled story, an Attorney General (AG) whose brother is the President of the United States, and America's chief investigative officer J. Edgar Hoover (Director) who just happens to have secret files on everyone of consequence in the United States.


Those salacious files include the President of the United States his brother, and their father Joseph P. Kennedy, who is probably smarter than all three of them put together. A self made man, who made a fortune bootlegging liquor out of Canada during Prohibition, the father would maintain his contacts with mafia leaders until his stroke suffered one year into his son's Presidency.


Many would feel that had Joseph Kennedy retained his ability to speak, he would have been able to protect his sons from assassination, but that is for other books to delve into. In this book we have the rivalry and the anger of two men with enormous egos who would clash for a 1000 days until suddenly Robert Kennedy's power would collapse on a Friday in Dallas.


It's all here, and it's here in detail. Burton Hersh is an experienced journalist, and he takes us on a cyclone during a period in American history that is full of trauma and turmoil, of idealism, and cynicism. Be sure that once you start it, you have carved out enough time to finish it because you are not going to want to do anything else once you begin reading. These are just a handful of the stories that you will learn the truth about:


* How did Joseph Kennedy in consort with J. Edgar Hoover manipulate the entire 1960 Convention so that Lyndon Johnson would be selected as the Vice Presidential nominee.


* What was Bobby Kennedy's (RFK)logic to drive master lawyer Roy Cohn from the McCarthy Committee hearings?


* What was the real relationship between JFK, RFK, and Marilyn Monroe, and will we ever know the truth about her death?


* What was Marilyn's relationship to the mafia godfathers, and did JFK know about it?


* Was there a conspiracy involving Johnny Rosselli of Las Vegas, New Orleans crime leader Carlos Marcello, and Santos Trafficante of Tampa to kill the President of the United States?


* How were these three men involved with future President Richard Nixon?


Throughout all of these stories there is the information master J. Edgar Hoover weaving and intertwining his way, always present in the minds of those in power. He was never far from where power resided. He would meet with the President for lunch, and inform him that society girl Judith Exner was a lover of the Outfits boss in Chicago. Hoover would make sure Bobby knew also. In doing so, the Director knew that he would remain in power at least through the end of JFK's Administration.


If this were fiction, nobody would believe it, but it's not fiction, its history as good as it gets, as exciting as it can be made, and still be in words.


Hersh goes through the origin of the mob, and Havana, and Castro. He examines the seeming contradiction of how Joe Kennedy could accept $15 million in mob money towards his son's election, and then stand by while the AG attempted to put the very same people that backed his brother into jail.


Understand these men, as you have never understood them before. For the first time, Hersh unravels the puzzle of JFK, RFK, and Hoover, and the America they made, and remade. What they were trying to do, and who they were trying to stop. The collision between them would go on for three years, and then end one sudden day when Hoover would call the AG at his home in Virginia on a Friday afternoon, and without introduction or niceties simply say, YOUR BROTHER IS DEAD.


You won't put it down, and you will remember it forever. In deal after deal, you will understand how government worked then, and wonder how it really works now? From the election to the cover up, Hersh leaves no stone unturned, and we should all be grateful for the effort that he put into this book. If you can handle the truth, this is the book for you, and thank you for reading this review.


Richard C. Stoyeck
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Writer knew too much, editor too little, February 8, 2008
This review is from: Bobby and J. Edgar: The Historic Face-Off Between the Kennedys and J. Edgar Hoover That Transformed America (Hardcover)
This primly salacious biography suffers from two conflicting flaws. Writer Burton Hersh seems to know too much about his subjects and is unable to dissever the wheat from the chaff. He seems hell-bent on telling the reader everything about everything, to the point of confusion. Detailing knicknames of mobsters who make cameo appearances in a paragraph or two, for example, blurs understanding rather than clarifying. Burton's quick switching between names hampers understanding as well, with John F. Kennedy switching to Jack and Bobby to Robert to Bob within a few sentences, making it difficult to be sure what character is acting in the play. The overabundance of detail makes for a very tedious read.

Compounding the difficulty is a serious failure in editorial oversight. Misspellings abound, both typographic and the "spellcheck" variety with correctly spelled but incorrect words. Sentence structure is convoluted to the point that necessitates re-reading, parsing and deconstructing the author's intent. A competent editor would have cut a third of the text and imposed clearer chronological threads. History buffs will pick up a few new details and learn more about the sex lives and obsessions of the rich and famous than is particularly useful.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
July in Greater Los Angeles can provide a month in the frying pan, what with the wind off the arid, remorseless desert pulling through the five oceanside counties. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
organized crime section, microphone surveillance, national crime commission, old financier, mob lawyer, street agents, raw files
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Robert Kennedy, Joe Kennedy, New York, White House, Edgar Hoover, Jack Kennedy, Roy Cohn, John Kennedy, Bob Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Carlos Marcello, United States, Jimmy Hoffa, New Orleans, Bobby Kennedy, Palm Beach, Bobby Baker, Martin Luther King, Meyer Lansky, Sam Giancana, Rackets Committee, Hyannis Port, Courtney Evans
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