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Jack: A Life Like No Other [Hardcover]

Geoffrey Perret (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 30, 2001
Previous biographies of John F. Kennedy have been based almost entirely on newspaper files and personal recollections. Geoffrey Perret's Jack is both the first comprehensive one-volume biography of JFK and the first account of his life based on the extensive and important documentary record that has finally become available, including Kennedy's personal diaries, hundreds of hours of taped conversations from the White House, recently declassified government documents, extensive family correspondence, and crucial interviews sealed for nearly forty years. The result is a gripping, accurate, and ultimately moving portrait of America's most charismatic president.

Jack provides much-needed context and perspective on Kennedy's bewilderingly complex personality. It offers an even-handed account of the seamy side of his life - orgies and abortions, health and drug problems - along with valuable insights into JFK's truly idealistic and visionary character.

Jack presents a compelling account of the volatile relationship between Kennedy and his wife, including Jackie's attempt to divorce him, move to Hollywood, and become a film star. At the same time Perret explains how, together, they created the Kennedy style.

Jack reveals how the restless, innovative Kennedy was able to overturn more than a hundred years of political tradition, forge the modern political campaign, and, once in the White House, modernize the presidency. His success was so complete that all serious presidential candidates since 1960 have sought to compare themselves to JFK, not challenging his legacy but embracing it.

Jack is filled, too, with numerous revelations, such as the true story behind the lobotomy of JFK's sister Rosemary. And here, for the first time, is a comprehensive account of Kennedy's numerous and varied ailments from childhood on, including his back problems.

Perret describes how JFK got the two most important decisions of his administration right: his handling of the Cuban missile crisis and his stance on civil rights. As to Vietnam, Kennedy did not believe it was worth fighting for, and in the last months of his presidency he began formulating a secret plan for neutralization and withdrawal - if he won the 1964 election. But that, of course, was not to be: Convinced he would die young, Kennedy foresaw that a violent death would claim him. Throughout his brief time in the White House he was haunted by a vision of a man standing at a window, looking down at him, holding a rifle.

Jack: A Life Like No Other is a book like no other. Here, at last, John F. Kennedy seems to step off the page in all his vitality, charm, and originality.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Written with commendable measure, Geoffrey Perret's Jack: A Life Like No Other is an informal but informed cradle-to-grave biography of JFK. Though Perret hardly ignores the intricacies of Kennedy's uneven and truncated presidency--specifically the cold war imbroglios of Southeast Asia, Berlin, and Cuba, as well as intractable domestic festerings of poverty and civil rights--his real interest lies with the man himself. Kennedy, in chronic ill health from childhood, emerges here as a singular and daunting contradiction, at once cautious and impulsive, generous and selfish. He was a brat and a man of the people, an inveterate womanizer and a devoted family man, well-read but hardly intellectual, a charmer with a ferocious temper. Perret's book--utilizing heretofore-unseen documents--is refreshingly candid and felicitously nonjudgmental. Neither hagiographical, mean-spirited, salacious, nor conspiratorial, Jack, rich in anecdotes, is a welcome, evenhanded addition to the Kennedy library. --H. O'Billovitch

From Publishers Weekly

erret (Ulysses S. Grant, etc.) delivers a flawed biography of JFK in which the subject trapped in the crosshairs of shoddy research and poor prose style seems unable to come to life. Perret's machine-like, event-driven narrative delivers one well-known fact after another, but the author repeatedly fails to get close to the normally ingratiating Kennedy. Further, Perret's narrative is too often driven by the few new sources he's been able to discover. Thus due to a recently unearthed travel diary we get every detail concerning JFK's generally uninteresting 1937 tour of Europe. Other of the book's problems stem from sweeping generalizations and various errors of both fact and interpretation. Discussing Joseph Kennedy Sr.'s Wall Street activities, Perret informs readers that "big stock market speculators" were blamed (by whom? the public? the government? the newspapers?) for the 1929 stock market crash. As regards errors of fact, a few include Perret's misquoting the widely known Catholic prayer "Hail Mary," his references to "Catholic ministers" and his assertion that Jack's bad back did not date from childhood (as medical records clearly show). Perret embarks on yet another arguable sidetrack from reality when he asserts that Kennedy who always took great pains to separate his public life from his religious life backed out of a 1948 event involving Protestant ministers after being "ordered" to do so by "the Catholic hierarchy," and then took the unusual step of confessing the same to journalist Drew Pearson. The anecdote, originating with Pearson, deserves scrutiny that Perret does not seem disposed to deliver. And that, sadly, is the story of this book. Photos not seen by PW. (Oct. 30)Forecast: With this title, Laurence Leamer's The Kennedy Men and a couple of titles on Jacqueline Kennedy, it's another big Kennedy season. But how much more do readers want to know about America's almost-royal family? Perhaps a lot first serial rights on this have gone to GQ, and Perret is booked on the Today Show. He will tour N.Y., D.C. and Boston.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 480 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; 1st edition (October 30, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375503633
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375503634
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,566,653 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Worth reading, but definitively not a great book, June 8, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Jack: A Life Like No Other (Hardcover)
Geoffrey Perret presents a new look at the life of America's most beloved president; it is also "the first craddle to grave biography" of this intricate personality. While the book is worth reading for those who are looking for a single volume biography of Jack Kennedy, it is definitivley not the definitive life of JFK nor a top work of scholarship. It reads more like a big volume of Biography Magazine or any news weekly than a well written, well researched piece. It will entretain and you will learn something --the history parts are very good-, but it will not earn a place in history as Gilbert's or Jenkins biography of Churchill will do.
Nevertheless you should read this book. It is an easy read, very entretaining and revealing. Jack's sex-adiction, amazing ambition, relation to his imposing father, sense of destiny, will be exposed before your eyes. It makes you wonder about where character in our leaders went since then.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An above average effort by Geoffrey Perret., November 19, 2001
By 
This review is from: Jack: A Life Like No Other (Hardcover)
If you've never read Perret's books, you should know that he is simply a literary recycler. In other words, there is rarely anything new in his books, and in some past books, most notably his book on Ulysses Grant, there are some glaring errors that any author/historian and editor would be ashamed of.

This book is, however, a good read. In fact, while there's little that is new, there are pages here that are just as good as anything in a JFK biography. There's a grace to some of the writing in this book.

Sometimes I found myself cringing at some of his sources (Seymour Hersh's book comes to mind), but for the most part it's assembled well.

Despite the number of JFK books out there, there are few one volume titles out there. This might be a good place to start if that's what you're seeking.

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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Gripping, but Flawed Account of a Great Man, November 21, 2001
By 
Brenan Nierman (United States of America) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Jack: A Life Like No Other (Hardcover)
The picture on the cover of this book pretty much conveys the portrait of John F. Kennedy contained within; and for this reason, I couldn't put it down. In fact, I really wonder if it is possible to write a boring book about JFK. This is a man who loved life and lived it to the hilt; and to his credit, Perrot has succeeded in conveying this.

It would have been helpful, however, if the book were not marred by misstatements of fact. Two stand out in my mind. In one part of the book, we are told that the Kennedys held a grudge against Lyndon Johnson because he had helped spread the rumor of JFK's Addison's disease atteh Democratic convention in 1956. Yet in another part of the book, Perrot gives the date (correctly) as 1960. In truth, in 1956 LBJ was announcing Texas' votes for JFK in the balloting for vice president, hailing him as the "fighting sailor who bears the scars of battle." This is a far cry from rumor-mongering, which LBJ did indeed engage in in 1960, when he was a rival for the Democratic presidential nomination.

The most egregious error, however, is that Perrot has the Connallys sitting FACING the Kennedys in the limousine on that fateful day in November 1963, when it seemed that the world stood still and began shedding tears which continue to fall. When I read this, my first reaction was one of incredulity. For the images of that day are etched in the minds of so many people, including those like myself who, though living, were not old enough to remember JFK first-hand, that I cannot fathom how anyone who has seen the Zapruder film or the photos from that horrible event could get such a mundane fact so wrong.

It's the little things like this that make you wonder.

That being said, I would still recommend this book for someone who wants an idea of what it was like to have a man in the White House who, for all his faults and all his flaws, still managed...and manages still...to summon forth the very best of the country that he served so well.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
It is close to noon on May 29, 1917, and uncomfortably cold for the time of year as Dr. Frederick Good drives through Boston to attend Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Jack Kennedy, Joe Kennedy, United States, White House, New York, Honey Fitz, Soviet Union, Palm Beach, Air Force, Joint Chiefs, South Vietnam, Oval Office, Arthur Krock, State Department, West Virginia, Bay of Pigs, Capitol Hill, Latin America, Peace Corps, Cold War, Ted Sorensen, Western Europe, Hyannis Port, Clare Luce, Lem Billings
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