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JACKIE
ETHEL JOAN: WOMEN OF CAMELOT
J.
Randy Taraborrelli
Warner Books
Nonfiction
ISBN: 0446609129
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Growing up in a Catholic household in New England, the Kennedys
were considered kings. Not just rich royalty but religious, correct,
large-familied, Yankee-ingenuity royalty. I feel like I've read
and heard every possible story I ever could about the family. Now
comes JACKIE, ETHEL, JOAN: Women of Camelot by J. Randy Taraborrelli,
concentrating only on these three strong, courageous, and ultimately
disgraced women who suffered the slings and arrows of clutching
to the arm of political stars in the American political firmament.
I learned a few things I never knew before, but there's little here
that any even random follower of Kennedy myth and legend would know.
Joan Kennedy, ex-wife of Senator Ted, is the woman whom we learn
the most about in this book, since she never suffered the martyred
widowhood that her sisters-in-law did. Joan, the daughter of successful
but alcoholic parents, became known as the Kennedy family's conscience.
Her keen eye to family issues was not so clear when it turned upon
her own life. Unable to reconcile herself to Ted's inability to
remain faithful to her, Joan turned to the alcoholism that was her
personal family heritage. With the help of Jackie, she was able
to overcome her addiction to drink as well as her failed marriage,
turning her life completely around in the process. The other thing
I did not realize was how close these women became, serving as sisters
under the dual auspices of political wives as well as the women
who suffered at the hands of their husbands' philandering and family
hardball. Each of them worked hard on their husbands' campaigns
(often pregnant with the ever-growing Kennedy family population)
and all of them rallied around the others at times of crisis, such
as JKF's dangerous affair with Marilyn Monroe and Ted's unfortunate
"accident" at Chappaquiddick, at which point Joan was designated
as the person to relay the family's condolences to Mary Jo Kopechne's
family. This is an interesting psychological study of forced sisterhood,
of the intelligent women behind the powerful men, of a family whose
legend threatens to outweigh the individual achievements of its
members. JACKIE, ETHEL, JOAN is a good summer read, so get a copy
before Memorial Day and have it ready for your next vacation. ---
Reviewed by Jana Siciliano
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