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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
29 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good but somewhat slanted,
This review is from: A Woman Named Jackie (Hardcover)
Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis is as fixed as an American landmark, as the beautiful and refined wife of one of the most inexplicably popular presidents of all time. But how much of "Jackie" did the public see, and how much was real?We travel from the beginning of Jackie's life to near its end (though the biography stops short of her death, or that of her son): a girl raised between the ultra-womanizer Black Jack Bouvier, and ruthless social-climber Janet Lee Bouvier Auchincloss. Jackie became accomplished, admired, beautiful, and eventually married into the politically ambitious Kennedy family, a now legendary marriage. It chronicles her time in the White House, the death of her husband, her loyal campaigning for Robert Kennedy, her marriage to the wealthy Greek businessman Aristotle Onassis, her second widowhood, her career as a publishing editor, and the early adult lives of her two children. Heymann avoids some of the pitfalls of many Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis biographies, such as excessive fawning on Jackie herself, and excessive speculation on her inner state. He doesn't avoid all of them; there is a great deal of information on not only Jack's raunchy extramarital affairs, but those of Jackie's father, Joe Kennedy, Bobby Kennedy, and Ari Onassis. He does, however, provide equal information about relevent "supporting players," such as Jackie's sister Lee Radziwell and Onassis's tragic daughter Christina. Fans of Jackie might not like this book; Heymann does not gloss over Jackie's many flaws, and utilizes many testimonies to back himself up. Jackie is revealed as a shopaholic who spent money without restraint, was quite manipulative, and often acted in a very cold, unfeeling manner. Yet he also emphasized her very real sorrow when Jack died, and how it affected her for a long time after. Readers will find themselves unable to sympathize at all with Jack, given the behavior chronicled in here. In fact, Heymann seems to be either showing the harsh, brutal truth about both of them, or is slanted away in sympathy. However, he uses the same treatment for every person, ranging from Marilyn Monroe to Frank Sinatra. Readers will have to judge for themselves what is the correct portrayal. Heymann does a very good job chronicling other people's opinions of Jackie in this book, from prominent people such as Gore Vidal down to Grecian store clerks. Rather than painting a picture, he puts together a mosaic of very small pieces, interview snippets, sightings, and so forth. His writing style is pleasant and well-ordered, not stiff or difficult at all. Heymann's biography is a nice gossipy read, if you don't mind reading a few very long chapters on Jack's extramarital activities. Pleasantly written, well-researched, with either a dislike of the subject or a very impartial eye. You be the judge.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Good Read, but be prepared for the ugly truth...,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Woman Named Jackie (Hardcover)
...that JFK's Presidency and marriage to Jackie were not romantic fairytales. Heymann has done an impressive amount of interviews with people who knew Jack and Jackie well, and while some may argue with his interpretation of certain events, there's no doubt that he's done his homework. This book follows Jackie from her surprisingly unhappy childhood, which was marked by an ugly divorce between her dashing yet womanizing and big-spending father and her uptight, social-climbing and rather cold mother. Jackie was a definite daddy's girl - she adored her father and never seemed to care too much for her mother or the second man she married, wealthy stockbroker Hugh Auchincloss. Thereafter comes the now-familiar story - she grows into a beautiful and sophisticated young woman (who emphasizes her father's French ancestry and all but ignores her mother's Irish heritage), attends the best women's private schools in America and France, becomes engaged to a nice yet boring young stockbroker; but then suddenly breaks off the engagement when she begins dating a sexy and exciting US Congressman who just happens to come from a VERY wealthy family - John F. Kennedy. Then comes the high-society wedding, the rocky marriage (made so by Jack's constant cheating and Jackie's expensive shopping sprees and snobbery towards her Kennedy in-laws), her glamorous tour as First Lady in the early sixties, the horror of JFK's assassination, and finally her controversial marriage to the ultra-wealthy yet crude Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis. Although Heymann tries to be fair and objective to Jackie, his book does seem to emphasize the dark sides of Jack and Jackie, and those people who still have a romantic view of the couple will find this book to be disturbing. Yet while she had her flaws, there's no denying her now-legendary poise during her husband's funeral or her admirable role in raising her two children to be the decent and well-mannered people they turned out to be. Overall, this is an engrossing "warts-and-all" biography of one of the most famous women of the 20th Century. Recommended!
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting and Provocative,
By
This review is from: Woman Named Jackie - Updated (Hardcover)
I picked up this book as part of a research project. I did not realize just how rounded a person Jackie really was. Prior to this point, I thought she comformed to all of the ideal notions about the pre-feminist woman. Boy was I mistakenAmist all of the controvery about Hillary Rodham Clinton and her role in thbe adminstration, it is important to remember that Jackie also played an important policy role. Unlike several of her sisters in law, she was more insistent about getting to the all male sanctum of policy making. The whitehouse renovation was only ythe most public of Jackie's involvement. I personally think she would have been happier and had less contradictions if she were of a later generation and did not have to "look" the part of the fawning wife (then prefered by the media) She seemed bored by the press conferences that soley wanted to focus on family and fashion and really would have been a dyamo in the office today. It is difficult to say what JFK might have done had the limosune been domed, but it appears as if they might have settled down together and enjoyed life. For the first time, we really understood why she was so upset that November. She and her husband were actually falling in love with each other when tragedy tore them appart. This chapters is written so well, I cried reading it. I was also impressed with how she raised her children. The tabloids are littered with the stories of famous children, to Jackie's credit, she insistilled an unbreakable moral compass that kept them from intentionally self destructing. Not many parents, public or private can claim that accheivement.
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