Benjamin C. Bradlee
Conversations with Kennedy
"Give[s] us a good idea of what Jack Kennedy was really likeprobably
as good an idea as anything likely to be written about him [him]. . . . Highly
informal and readable." R. L. Tobin, Saturday Review
Ben Bradlee first came to know John Kennedy well when they were Washington neighbors
in 1958. They remained good friends and off-the-record confidants until President
Kennedy's death. They also had a more professional relationship governed by Bradlee's
job covering the capital for Newsweek.
Bradlee and his wife Tony participated in the parties at the White House and in
more private moments when the president and Jacqueline were relaxing with friends.
With Kennedy's knowledge, Bradlee kept notes of their intimate conversations. These
records are the basis for this behind-the-scenes record of the human side of the
JFK presidency.
For the first time, all the conflicting elements of Kennedy's personality are seen
at the closest possible range. Here was a politician of the South Boston stripe
who also was at home among the WASP intellectuals he brought into government,
who loved the sick old tiger who was his father and yet would not be dominated by
him, who understood his brothers' every quirk and strength, admired women, and had
few illusions about human nature but nursed dreams all the same.
At the time his conversations with Kennedy took place, Benjamin Bradlee was the
Washington bureau chief for Newsweek magazine. He has been with the Washington
Post since 1965 and has been executive editor since 1968.
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