The revolution of Robert Kennedy From power to protest after JFK

John R. Bohrer

Book - 2017

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Bloomsbury Press, an imprint of Bloomsbury Press Inc 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
John R. Bohrer (author)
Physical Description
372 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781608199648
  • Introduction: Memorial
  • Book I. The New Frontier Behind
  • 1. The Future Question
  • 2. A Job for Bobby
  • 3. Seeing Ghosts
  • 4. Distractions
  • 5. Loyalty Above All
  • 6. A Newer World
  • Book II. Revolution
  • 7. The Sixties Breaking Open
  • 8. Ruthless
  • 9. The Revolution Now in Progress
  • 10. Slow Boil
  • 11. Revolución
  • 12. Power and Responsibility
  • 13. Ripple
  • Epilogue: Memorial
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

This latest addition to the RFK shelf concentrates on Robert Kennedy's transformation from ruthless McCarthyite to power-wielding but not-much-liked attorney general, to (after his brother JFK's death) strong exponent of liberal values and beacon for many, especially the young. Central to the story is Bobby's determined opposition in every way to his bitter rival Lyndon Johnson (the antipathy, of course, was reciprocal) and eventually his equally strong opposition (after some vacillation) to the Vietnam War. Bohrer focuses on the period following JFK's assassination, beginning with RFK's little-covered bid for the vice-presidential nomination in 1964 and then the laborious senatorial race in New York and his actions while senator. The author is at his best in detailing Kennedy's political and personal evolution, but there is little on the changes in America that enabled his transformation. Bohrer handles his sources well and divulges some new information in the process. His writing is straightforward but occasionally a bit clunky. Still, RFK followers will find plenty here to add to their understanding of this turbulent period in American history.--Levine, Mark Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Bohrer, a reporter, historian, and television news producer, follows the arc of Bobby Kennedy's political career from November 1963, the month of J.F.K.'s assassination, to R.F.K.'s own assassination in June 1968. J.F.K.'s death marked the emergence of R.F.K. as an independent politician whose stature and influence grew-within the Democratic Party, with anti-Vietnam activists, and with progressives-significantly over this five-year span. Bohrer first concentrates on R.F.K.'s fraught relationship with President Johnson, which was complicated by both the public's desire to see R.F.K. as an extension of his brother and Johnson's uneasiness with the specter of his predecessor. Bohrer then turns to his core thesis: that R.F.K.'s political philosophy evolved to embrace a revolutionary domestic policy that focused on relieving poverty in rural as well as urban America and a desire to address racial injustice. R.F.K. also proposed an equally novel foreign policy that eschewed direct interference in Latin America, featured opposition to South African apartheid, argued for a negotiated peace with North Vietnam, and favored nuclear nonproliferation. Readers will see the issues R.F.K. raised in his fight for the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination echoed in early 21st-century American politics. Well-written and well-documented, Bohrer's work paints a picture of R.F.K. that is favorable, but not hagiographic. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

On streets and college campuses from New York to Mississippi, as well as Latin America and South Africa, huge crowds gathered for Robert Francis "Bobby" Kennedy (1925-68), younger brother of U.S. President John F. Kennedy. Originally, they cheered Bobby as the personification of John's progressive legacy. Eventually, they lauded him for his own achievements. As a federal prosecutor, attorney general, senator, and Democratic presidential candidate, he advocated peace in Vietnam and spoke against regime change and apartheid. Rivals branded him a ruthless opportunist who leveraged the Kennedy name to electoral success. From independent journalist Bohrer, this biography focuses on the turbulent period 1963-66, when Bobby grieved the loss of his brother and forged his own political path. Later chapters concentrate on politics and Bobby's troubled relationship with President Lyndon B. Johnson. While Larry Tye's Bobby Kennedy and Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s Robert Kennedy and His Times boast more distinguished pedigrees and longer page counts, this work makes its mark. VERDICT Although Kennedy was not quite as revolutionary as the title implies, Bohrer's elegiac and exhaustive account reveals a potentially transformational leader whose life was dramatically cut short by his assassination in 1968.-Michael Rodriguez, Univ. of Connecticut © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Freelance reporter and TV news producer Bohrer debuts with an inquiry into the transformation of Robert F. Kennedy (1925-1968) from hard-nosed political operative to inspirational presidential candidate.When John F. Kennedy was murdered in 1963, his brother Robert had never held elective office, nor seemed likely to. As JFK's campaign manager and later as attorney general, he stepped on many toes and made few friends; the word most often used to describe him was "ruthless." Grief-stricken and increasingly marginalized by a paranoid Lyndon Johnson, RFK was profoundly uncertain about his future. After a desultory quest for the 1964 vice-presidential nomination was vetoed by Johnson, he won a Senate seat in New York and began building a national constituency around a radical social welfare program and skepticism about the administration's Vietnam policy. Growing up in wealth and privilege, he had had little experience with the effects of racism and poverty; as a senator, his efforts to advance his brother's civil rights legacy led him to a wholehearted embrace of their victims in contentious and even dangerous circumstances. To young people, especially, he began speaking passionately of a "revolution now in progress," peaceful if possible, but demanding advances in individual dignity and in economic and political freedom. Bohrer presents this thorough and well-researched narrative in an evenhanded style, leaving evaluation of this still-controversial politician to readers. Oddly, he ends his story in early 1966, two years before RFK definitively broke with Johnson, running a long-shot presidential campaign that ended with Kennedy's assassination; the implication is that Kennedy's political transformation was complete by this time and all that followed was merely consequential. The author also leaves it to readers to ponder the continuing relevance of this long-dead senator who stood for many as "a bridge for a country that was tearing apart." A poignant sketch of a lost champion of social justice from an age when it could still be said that "politics is still the greatest and most honorable adventure." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.