September 14, 2011
In Tapes, Candid Talk by Young Kennedy Widow
Janny Scott in the New York Times:
At just 34, and in what her daughter, Caroline Kennedy, describes in a foreword to the book as “the extreme stages of grief,” Mrs. Kennedy displays a cool self-possession and a sharp, somewhat unforgiving eye. In her distinctive breathy cadences, an intimate tone and the impeccable diction of women of her era and class, she delivers tart commentary on former presidents, heads of state, her husband’s aides, powerful women, women reporters, even her mother-in-law.
Charles DeGaulle, the French president, is “that egomaniac.” The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is “a phony” whom electronic eavesdropping has found arranging encounters with women. Indira Gandhi, the future prime minister of India, is “a real prune — bitter, kind of pushy, horrible woman.”
The White House social secretary, Letitia Baldrige, Mrs. Kennedy tells Mr. Schlesinger, loved to pick up the phone and say things like “Send all the White House china on the plane to Costa Rica” or tell them they had to fly string beans in to a state dinner. She quotes Mr. Kennedy saying of Lyndon B. Johnson, his vice president, “Oh, God, can you ever imagine what would happen to the country if Lyndon was president?” And Mr. Kennedy on Franklin D. Roosevelt: “Charlatan is an unfair word,” but “he did an awful lot for effect.”
More here.
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Comments
Score:
FDR, MLK, LBJ, Indira Gandhi - 1
Vapid, ignorant socialites - 0
Posted by: Sam | Sep 14, 2011 4:38:58 PM
This is awfully unattractive. If I were Caroline, I would take more care not let my late mother look so bad. I was a child under ten when this was going on, however, my parents Democrats in a sea of Republicans. It'll be interesting to see how people born a lot later react to it. Perhaps with indifference?
Posted by: Elatia Harris | Sep 14, 2011 5:26:03 PM
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