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5.0 out of 5 stars A Good thing in a small package
It is interesting to me that a short book such as this illuminates as much about the Kennedy administration than many thicker books for popular reading. A main difference is that the more popular readings focus on sensational stories and some try to make unsupported connections between some aspect of the political figure's personal development and that person's decisions...
Published on June 5, 2006 by Anthony Sanchez

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2.0 out of 5 stars Errors, typos, simplistic writing
Perhaps this book is not without merit, but the errors and typos were very distracting. Once I began to take note of these problems (toward the end of the first chapter) I realized that the writing is simplistic and tortuous, the transitions awkward, the chronology sometimes confusing.
I had to reread sentences several times, not because the concepts were difficult...
Published on January 25, 2010 by M. Bolthouse


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2.0 out of 5 stars Errors, typos, simplistic writing, January 25, 2010
Perhaps this book is not without merit, but the errors and typos were very distracting. Once I began to take note of these problems (toward the end of the first chapter) I realized that the writing is simplistic and tortuous, the transitions awkward, the chronology sometimes confusing.
I had to reread sentences several times, not because the concepts were difficult but because the point of the sentence had been lost in fragments and unnecessary commas. Transitions between topic were abrupt.
Put simply, the writing is so amateurish that for me, the historical substance and argument had little chance; I just could not take this slim but clunkily-written book seriously.
And at $20+ ?!
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Good thing in a small package, June 5, 2006
By 
Anthony Sanchez (Fredericksburg, va United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: John F. Kennedy and a New Generation (Library of American Biography Series) (2nd Edition) (Paperback)
It is interesting to me that a short book such as this illuminates as much about the Kennedy administration than many thicker books for popular reading. A main difference is that the more popular readings focus on sensational stories and some try to make unsupported connections between some aspect of the political figure's personal development and that person's decisions while in office.

This short political biography ignores the bed sheet and fashion stories that dominate so many other Kennedy books. This is a book for a person with a serious interest in the Kennedy presidency. Despite its brevity, the author gives a strong presentation on the president's political style and his influence on domestic and foreign affairs. His discussion on Kennedy's significant domestic policies is of particular importance since, except for civil rights, JFK is better remembered for his foreign policies.

The writer without engaging in Peggy Noonan-like glorification of his subject (Noonan writes on Reagan) portrays JFK as a highly intelligent and astute figure developing more into a statesman than a politician.

Unfortunately, Kennedy's legacy was long ago hijacked by those who want to minimize his influence by remembering him as a youthful charmer with little substance. This is done by both conservatives (who are angered both by his civil rights efforts and his growing independence of military), and by liberals (who too are angered by his civil rights positions that moved too slowly for their taste and his general refusal to put the cart of the liberal agenda ahead of the national horse). As a result, most discussions of Kennedy center on matters that had little to do with him as the nation's leader.

Many of us (for me as a child) remember him and know him as a person whose death was very personal and traumatic. It was the first time many of us saw our parents and teachers cry. This book helps us to better explain to younger generations Kennedy's importance to the nation and to ourselves.
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1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Journal of a College Freshman, April 18, 2000
By A Customer
Burner wrote this biography upon previous works written about Kennedy. He admires Kennedy a lot because he doesn't really give any shortcomings that came about while Kennedy was President. Burners does give a clear picture about the events taking place in the book.
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John F. Kennedy and a New Generation (Library of American Biography Series) (2nd Edition)
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