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Editorial Content for These Few Precious Days: The Final Year of Jack with Jackie

Reviewer (text)

Barbara Bamberger Scott

“They wanted to talk. No, they needed to talk, to set the record straight, to tell the story of these two remarkable people as they knew it.” Thus bestselling author Christopher Andersen (THE DAY JOHN DIED) explains how he was able to get so many famous people from an earlier era to come forth with stories of one of the 20th century’s most remarkable couples, Jack and Jackie --- or, simply, The Kennedys. Such icons as Gore Vidal, Oleg Cassini, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., John Kenneth Galbraith, and many more contributed to this paean to the last year of the marriage that lasted 10 years, the presidency that lasted less than three.

"THESE FEW PRECIOUS DAYS is not a mere scandal tell-all, though the Kennedys gave us plenty of latitude for speculation. Andersen’s account carries weight as it examines the tension, depression and fear at the White House during the crucial days of the Cuban Missile Crisis."

Andersen takes us behind White House doors for a very intimate look at Jack and Jackie Kennedy at home, even undressed. He recounts Jackie’s resolve to sleep with her husband whenever he was home, and his unstoppable inclination to bed other women whenever he wasn’t. The rumors about Marilyn Monroe are bared at last, revealing that Jackie knew all about Jack’s carryings-on with the emotionally scarred actress, who actually believed Jack would soon leave his wife for her. Even with the perspective of many years, readers who hold dear the memories of those bright days may wince at “too much information” about the first couple’s sex lives, and perhaps even more so to have to recall that, like so many Americans at the time, the lovely Jackie was a chain smoker.

In addition to the clinical knowledge of Jack’s many ailments --- he seems to have been unusually physically handicapped for one considered a sportsman and tireless lady’s man --- we are told that the whole White House gang was zestfully taking injections of amphetamines from an infamous medical advisor known as “Dr. Feelgood.”

However, THESE FEW PRECIOUS DAYS is not a mere scandal tell-all, though the Kennedys gave us plenty of latitude for speculation. Andersen’s account carries weight as it examines the tension, depression and fear at the White House during the crucial days of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Most poignant, though, are undoubtedly the scenes surrounding the premature birth and death, after 39 hours, of the infant Patrick. Not only can we identify with the mother’s pain and grief, we are told that Jack, for the first time, came openly unglued at the death of his little son. This family tragedy occurred just a few months before the fateful day in Dallas, a day Jack wanted to avoid but could not. A day that some would later say set in place a template of violence, rage and despair that swept the nation and then the world. A day that ended the shared American dream that was the Kennedys.

Jackie spent too much, Jack philandered; she was a snob, he was a spoiled rich kid. But the couple was often seen sharing gossip like two smitten teenagers, tête â tête, in the midst of grand public occasions when they arguably should have been paying attention to guests. It’s hard to imagine a more romantic, tempestuous relationship, more familial, more fraught with the huge cares of the entire world, played out in the world’s spotlight. In the end, as Andersen says, "It all came back to the electrifying young couple in the White House that held the world spellbound for a thousand days.”

Teaser

They were the original power couple --- outlandishly rich, impossibly attractive and endlessly fascinating. Now, in this rare, behind-the-scenes portrait of the Kenne­dys in their final year together, biographer Christopher Andersen shows us a side of JFK and Jackie we’ve never seen before. Theirs is a love story unlike any other --- filled with secrets, scandals and bomb­shells that could never be fully revealed...until now.

Promo

They were the original power couple --- outlandishly rich, impossibly attractive and endlessly fascinating. Now, in this rare, behind-the-scenes portrait of the Kenne­dys in their final year together, biographer Christopher Andersen shows us a side of JFK and Jackie we’ve never seen before. Theirs is a love story unlike any other --- filled with secrets, scandals and bomb­shells that could never be fully revealed...until now.

About the Book

They were the original power couple --- outlandishly rich, impossibly attractive and endlessly fascinating. Now, in this rare, behind-the-scenes portrait of the Kenne­dys in their final year together, #1 New York Times bestselling biographer Christopher Andersen shows us a side of JFK and Jackie we’ve never seen before. Tender, intimate, complex, and, at times, explosive, theirs is a love story unlike any other --- filled with secrets, scandals and bomb­shells that could never be fully revealed...until now. Including:  

  • Stunning new details about the Kennedys’ rumored affairs --- hers as well as his --- and how they ultimately overcame all odds to save their marriage  
  • The president’s many premonitions of his own death, and how he repeatedly tried to pull out of his last fateful trip to Dallas  
  • Shocking revelations about how the couple, unaware of the dangers, became dependent on amphetamine injections, the real reason --- according to his longtime personal physician --- for JFK’s notorious libido, and how the White House hid his many serious medical problems from the public  
  • How the tragic death of their infant son Patrick led to an emotional outpouring from the president that surprised even their closest friends --- and brought JFK and Jackie closer than they had ever been
  • Touching firsthand accounts of the family’s most private moments, before and after the assassination  

Drawing on hundreds of interviews conducted with the Kennedys’ inner circle --- from family members and lifelong friends to key advisors and political confidantes --- Andersen takes us deeper inside the world of the president and his first lady than ever before. Unsparing yet sym­pathetic, bigger than life but all too real, THESE FEW PRECIOUS DAYS captures the ups and downs of a marriage, a man, and a woman, the memories of which will continue to fascinate and inspire for generations to come.