08.10.04 book Grace and Power: The Private World of the Kennedy White House Although forty-one years have passed since the Kennedys lived in the White House, the history of that era remains fertile ground for contemporary writers such as Sally Bedell Smith. Her latest book, Grace and Power: The Private World of the Kennedy White House, offers readers a detailed account of the day-to-day operations of the Kennedy White House. The author, who has previously written books on Princess Diana, Pamela Churchill Harriman, and William S. Paley, drew from 140 interviews, conducted over sixty oral histories, researched FBI records, and utilized archival research in her work on the Kennedys. In the book, which includes numerous black and white photographs, Smith portrays John F. Kennedy as vibrant, humorous, and intellectually curious, a man immersed in the times in which he lived. The author also recounts the president's lifestyle, such as his insatiable appetite for seducing attractive women while president. And she also asserts that the president's behavior lent itself to a certain "hedonism and moral relativism," which seemed to permeate through the White House during Kennedy's tenure in office. all rights reserved independent arts reporting, reviewing, and relevant discourse sm |
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