The young president who brought vigor and glamour to the White
House while he confronted cold war crises abroad and calls for
social change at home
John Fitzgerald Kennedy was a new kind of president. He
redefined how Americans came to see the nation's chief executive.
He was forty-three when he was inaugurated in 1961--the youngest
man ever elected to the office--and he personified what he called
the "New Frontier" as the United States entered the 1960s.
But as Alan Brinkley shows in this incisive and lively
assessment, the reality of Kennedy's achievements was much more
complex than the legend. His brief presidency encountered
significant failures--among them the Bay of Pigs fiasco, which cast
its shadow on nearly every national-security decision that
followed. But Kennedy also had successes, among them the Cuban
Missile Crisis and his belated but powerful stand against
segregation.
Kennedy seemed to live on a knife's edge, moving from one crisis
to another--Cuba, Laos, Berlin, Vietnam, Mississippi, Georgia, and
Alabama. His controversial public life mirrored his hidden private
life. He took risks that would seem reckless and even foolhardy
when they emerged from secrecy years later.
Kennedy's life, and his violent and sudden death, reshaped our
view of the presidency. Brinkley gives us a full picture of the
man, his times, and his enduring legacy.
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