And they called it Camelot A novel of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis

Stephanie Thornton, 1980-

Book - 2020

"An unforgettable portrait of the iconic life of Jackie O as she transforms herself into an American legend from acclaimed author Stephanie Marie Thornton. Millions fell silent, stricken by grief and disillusionment, as news of President Kennedy's assassination streaked across the globe. Where were you when it happened, they asked? But for one woman the answer has always been the same--for every step, every victory, and every defeat--she was right beside him. Born into luxury and beauty, spontaneous young Jacqueline Bouvier aspires to be more than the Debutante of the Year, even if she isn't quite sure what that means. A whirlwind courtship and fairytale wedding to handsome war-hero John F. Kennedy propel her into a startling... new world of power and politics. Filled with incredible highs and unimaginable challenges, Jackie learns to hone her survival skills. Her grace and grit help catapult JFK from the Senate to the Oval Office in one of the closest races in U.S. history. Jackie awes the country with her elegance and poise even as she is plagued by self-doubt over whether she can be the wife, mother, and First Lady that her husband and the country need. Then Jackie accompanies JFK to Dallas and their thousand days of magic come to an abrupt and devastating end--forcing Jackie to pick up the ruined fragments of her life and forge a triumphant new identity"--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Biographical fiction
Published
New York : Berkley 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Stephanie Thornton, 1980- (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes Readers Guide with discussion questions in unnumbered pages at end of work.
Physical Description
458 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780451490926
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

An American icon gets the fictional biographical treatment in this engrossing novel. Jacqueline Bouvier is in her early twenties when she meets the dashing John F. Kennedy, a congressman from Massachusetts whose political star is on the rise. Marrying into the sprawling Kennedy family presents some difficulties, but Jackie wins over the Kennedy men, forging an alliance with patriarch Joe. As John ascends into progressively higher offices, Jackie is often left to face the crises of her life miscarriages, depression, her husband's infidelity on her own, suppressing her feelings to present a glamorous façade to the world. The focus is on the highs and lows of Jackie's life: the early years of her marriage, her renovation of the White House, her husband's assassination, and her subsequent relationships with both Robert Kennedy and Aristotle Onassis. Jackie was a notoriously private person, but Thornton's (American Princess, 2019) author's note details the situations where the historical record is unclear. Readers will quickly realize that the fairytale world of Camelot wasn't what it seemed and that Jackie's story is full of hidden pain. An excellent choice for fans of historical fiction that explores the inner lives of women.--Nanette Donohue Copyright 2020 Booklist

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

Thornton follows up American Princess, a novel of Alice Roosevelt, with this engaging and meticulously researched take on Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy. Thornton opens moments before President Kennedy's assassination, exploring the complexity of the first couple's relationship, along with Jackie's own pretensions ("This simple pink pillbox hat put to shame those jowly Texas matrons with their overwrought concoctions of flowers and feathers"). Thornton then jumps back to 1952 and Jacqueline's doomed relationship with stockbroker John Husted and her job as a photo girl for the Washington Times-Herald, which leads to her meeting then Congressman John F. Kennedy, whom she quickly falls for despite knowing he's a womanizer. The novel expertly conveys the many painful episodes in Jackie's life--Kennedy's infidelity, the loss of two children, the violent death of her first husband, and the casual cruelty of her second--with grace and empathy. Students of history will appreciate Thornton's exacting research and convincing portrayal of the first lady and style icon, and Kennedy aficionados will feel as if they have an unparalleled access to Camelot. Thornton's magnificent portrayal of Onassis will delight fans of Kennedy-related fiction. (Mar.)

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

Thornton's second novel (after American Princess) is an intimate portrait of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis through the best and worst of her legendary life. A writer for the Times Herald at age 23, she marries war hero-turned-Congressman Jack Kennedy, devoting herself to him through surgery and serious illness, years of infidelity, and the soul-crushing loss of three of their five children in utero and at birth. A fashion icon and a favorite of Jack's father Joe and brother Bobby, Jackie mesmerizes the nation with her strength and poise. As first lady to the 35th President, Jackie restores the White House to historical beauty. While in Dallas, Jack is assassinated, leaving her a 34-year-old widow with two small children. She then grieves with Bobby, loving him more than a brother-in-law, until the New York senator is shot and killed. Fearing for her children's safety and attempting to escape the "Kennedy curse," she marries Aristotle Onassis, an older Greek playboy millionaire. After his passing, she finally finds contentment in a job as a book editor for Viking, while also opening a presidential library dedicated to Jack. VERDICT Readers will enjoy this heartbreaking story of a wife's fierce pride and loyalty to her president and country, despite years of marital loneliness and loss.--Laura Jones, Indiana State Lib., Indianapolis

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

CHAPTER 1 January 1952 The market seems to be recovering from its recent drop." John--my fiancé, although the word was still too slippery to make sense of-stood on the curb, oblivious to the bustle of people retrieving luggage from the trunks of yellow taxis and tail-finned Cadillacs. He wore his omnipresent gray flannel work suit, fingers twitching as if hovering over a calculating machine. "I really think the railroad division is going to carry the rest of the market, and American Telephone and Telegraph has been performing well in recent weeks too." "You don't say?" I tried to summon a single iota of interest to recapture how endearing his stock market talk had been on Christmas Eve when we admired a shop window on Madison Avenue, how the crisp pennants of our breath in the cold air had mingled together before he'd asked me to marry him. I'd invited John to Merrywood, my stepfather Hughdie's second estate outside Washington, DC, the better to convince my harridan of a mother--and me, if I was being honest--that I'd made the right decision. Instead, John spent most of the weekend debating Wall Street investments with my stepfather while I'd retreated unnoticed to the oak-paneled study. Normally the room's rich scent of antiquarian books and Oriental carpets and tobacco was the one place I could truly relax in this home that wasn't really mine, but I verily twitched with annoyance as I flipped the pages of Sybil, a novel written by Hughdie's cousin about a spirited woman who resigned herself into the necessity of marriage and thus settled into being a vegetable wife. She became humdrum and boring, like broccoli. I hated broccoli. "That's it," I'd announced to my younger sister Lee--who had been christened Caroline, although no one ever called her that--as I slammed shut the book. "If I marry John, I'll become one of those dull country club wives who can only converse about the progress of their children's teeth. My entire future will be spent as Sybil Husted." Lee had recently snagged a position as an editor's assistant at Harper's Bazaar and scarcely glanced up from the magazine's latest issue, its cover touting resort fashions with a breezy blonde whose legs stretched for five miles beneath her cotton shorts. "I thought you'd be Jacqueline Husted," she mused, waving a hand with fingernails bitten to the quick, "but I suppose you can change your first name, too, if you'd like. Very bohemian." Jacqueline Husted. Not for the first time, I worried that in marrying steady, number-crunching John Grinnel Wetmore Husted Jr., I'd be not so much settling down as settling. Not because he wasn't the gloriously wealthy New England husband my mother envisioned for me (even if his family was listed in the Social Register), and not because marrying him might mean bidding au revoir to trips to Paris, fox hunts with my New England friends, and my passion for journalism. But because before I'd met John, I'd been prepping Givenchy models for a shoot on the banks of the Seine--part of my short-lived stint for an internship I'd won at Vogue--and my stern-faced editor had warned me that, at twenty-two, I was teetering on the precipice of spinsterhood's fatal abyss, and I'd felt a chill go through me. I didn't want to marry any of the young men I'd grown up with, not because of them but because of their sedate lives. Still, had I accepted John's proposal for fear that I'd be left on the shelf? I scoffed, for surely I wasn't so mundane. Was I? I'd paced Merrywood's opulent study, ready to climb the walls as my fingers drifted over the beloved leather-bound volumes that I'd read countless times--Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray , Baudelaire's Les Épaves , Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment , Hugo's Les Misérables . I'd cringed when my tall, supposedly urbane fiancé admitted to scarcely recognizing the first-edition titles on the mahogany shelves, preferring his stock columns and account books instead. I loved books and words more than my horses; could scarcely imagine a life devoid of stories and drama. My heroes were Mowgli, Robin Hood, Little Lord Fauntleroy's grandfather, Scarlett O'Hara. . . . Not Sybil Husted. Now, with the last of winter's icy cold seeping through my wool jacket, John retrieved his newly purchased suitcase from the trunk of my blue Chevrolet Fleetmaster and pressed a dry kiss to my forehead. "In fact, it looks like corporate bonds will remain steady-" "John." He blinked, my voice drawing him away from the elusive chimeras of stocks and bonds. It was perhaps a bit overdramatic to think it, but John might well be nattering on about American Telephone and Ford and General Electric ten, twenty years from now. "Yes, dear?" Dear. It was so blasé, so tame. So John. I recalled a different man I'd met once, who had made me feel so alive, as if everything under the golden summer sun was possible. I banished the thought, for that had been nothing. There was no doubt that if I married John Husted, I'd live a languid, comfortable life for the rest of my days. But I wanted more than comfort. I needed something--anything--more than this. I pulled my hand back, tugged the sapphire-and-diamond sunburst ring from my finger and slipped it into his flannel pocket. "I'm sorry, John. I'm well and truly sorry." He blinked. "I don't know what you mean. Sorry for what?" I stepped back, needing to put space between us. "I'm afraid I can't marry you." From the way his expression fractured, I almost wished I could pluck the words from the air. Except that if I capitulated, ten years from now--or maybe even next year, or next month--I'd hate myself for it. And John would learn to hate me too. "What do you mean, you can't marry me?" "Exactly that. I wish I could, but I just-" "Is it about the money?" He squared his shoulders. "Because you can tell your mother that seventeen thousand a year is a decent amount for a stockbroker." I'd tried informing my aristocratic, chain-smoking mother of that already, but she'd only shaken her cigarette at me, sprinkling ash upon the Aubusson carpet as she paced and railed against my stupidity. "No, it's not that-" "Was it too fast?" John held the sparkling ring between his thumb and forefinger, his handsome face turning a splotchy shade of red. "You said you liked spontaneity, but I ruined it, didn't I?" I drew a deep breath. "It's none of that, John. You and I are too different to be a good fit," I said because I owed him my honesty. "You deserve a woman who can make you far happier than I ever will." And I deserved someone who could talk about something besides corporate stocks and bull markets. I didn't wait for a response, only hesitated long enough to touch his cheek. "Good-bye, John. I'm really very sorry." I didn't look back when I fled to the driver's side of my Chevrolet, instead slammed the door behind me and shifted into drive, intent on returning to Merrywood, where I planned to stay up until dawn reading a biography on Louis XIV to avoid thinking about what I'd just done. All I want is a man with a little imagination. Is that too much to ask? I was already twenty-two--a leftover daughter who couldn't live off her stepfather's generous goodwill and fifty-dollar-per-month allowance forever--and at twenty-five, society would deem me spoiled goods. It was no use railing against the firm rule that well-bred girls must make a good marriage if they wanted to continue living their lives. I was willing to play the game, but only on my terms. Jacqueline Bouvier, I thought to myself as John shrunk away in the rearview mirror. You narrowly escaped making the biggest mistake of your life. Or had I in fact just doomed myself? -- I adjusted my white evening gloves, glanced up at the imposing Georgetown mansion, and repressed a thin shudder. Another dinner party. Every bit of me screamed to retreat the way I'd come, to shuck off the black peep-toe heels I'd borrowed from Lee (that were a size too small), and hightail it home before the last golden drops of May sunshine dissipated into hazy twilight. I'd tried to beg off from tonight's dinner after Charley Bartlett informed me there was a friend he wanted me to meet. Following my broken engagement, it seemed every Jack and Jill now had a friend, cousin, or neighbor they needed to introduce me to. I was no fool. This was an ambush. To make matters worse, Lee had recently proposed to Michael Canfield, a handsome Harvard-educated veteran of Iwo Jima, which made it impossible to ignore that while my sister was seizing each day by its throat, I was merely treading water. It was perhaps the first time she'd bested me at anything--save the time as girls when I'd hit her with a croquet mallet and she'd retaliated by pushing me down the stairs--and I didn't care for the feeling. I ran a hand over my newly cropped hair-it was some small consolation that my mother no longer cracked three raw eggs over my head to rub the yolks into my long curls each night-before drawing a steadying breath and ringing the bell. Afternoon teas, dinner parties, and then what? I thought as footsteps approached from inside. What are you going to do with your life, Jacqueline Bouvier? I banished the question to the deepest, darkest corner of my mind. I'd worry about that later. Namely when I wasn't about to be enfiladed by Charley's stuttering, stamp-collecting cousin or his recently widowed former college roommate. "Jackie, darling!" Spectacled and buttoned-down Charley enveloped me in a stifling hug before helping me shrug off my coat. "So glad you could make it!" "I wouldn't miss one of your dinners for the world." I smiled despite myself, for as my journalistic consigliere, Charley had gifted me with late-night writing advice before several of my deadlines for my new position at the Washington Times-Herald. That had been my answer to the chasm of spinsterhood yawning before me, to get a job, and while I loved the work--and its twenty-five-dollar-a-week paycheck--I worried it wasn't enough. Charley let me kiss both his cheeks, a habit I'd picked up while in school at the Sorbonne. Then in his rapid-fire mumble, "I have someone I want you to meet." Just like his editorials, I thought. Straight for the jugular. Charley raised an arm and gestured into the crowded living room. "Jack! Over here." The room's sudden electricity raised the hair on the back of my neck as a tanned man with a mop of sandy-brown hair and a smile more powerful than an atomic bomb blast returned the wave. He wended his way toward us, looking as if he might have strolled straight off a Hollywood movie set. Dear God, I thought, unable to stop myself from biting my lip. It's him. He looked just as he had a year ago, except he'd traded his tuxedo for tonight's black evening suit with brown shoes. But even that sartorial mishap was endearing as I admired how well his shoulders filled out his dinner jacket and the way his smile crinkled the corners of his eyes in a most attractive way. I wondered if he remembered that other dinner party from long ago. Charley introduced us, beaming like a proud papa. "Jacqueline Bouvier, meet Congressman John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Although he's about to trade up and become Senator Kennedy." One of the Hyannis Port Kennedys, I imagined my mother whispering in my ear. Staunchly Catholic. Politically aggressive. More ill-gotten money than the Rockefellers. "My friends call me Jack," he said by way of greeting. His voice was unique but not unpleasant, the Bostonian accent so thick that his r's all but disappeared. He held out his hand and I shook it, surprised when he didn't give it the usual dead-fish treatment most men did, as if worried they might break poor, delicate little me. There was power there, and confidence too, so much that I couldn't help the grin that spread across my face, despite the fact that Jack gave no indication that he remembered me. And why would he? He's Jack Kennedy, who just dethroned Rock Hudson for the title of America's Most Eligible Bachelor. You're just Jackie Bouvier. That meant I had nothing to lose. Toy a little while with the debonair congressman who acted last time as if he walked on water. See if that gets his attention. "Are you the John F. Kennedy?" I asked as Charley disappeared on cue, leaving just Jack and me. "The same one who gets mistaken for a House page and recently addressed the floor of the House with his shirt untucked?" My grin deepened when Jack arched an eyebrow at me. "I read the article about you in the Saturday Evening Post. 'The Senate's Gay Young Bachelor,' wasn't it?" And the Post was right: Jack Kennedy did have the innocently respectful face of an altar boy at High Mass. Although the wicked spark in his stormy Irish eyes would have sent many an altar boy to confession. "That depends. Are you the Jackie Bouvier, who I once asked out for drinks, only to discover I was already the third wheel?" A ripple of some foreign pleasure passed over my skin at the sound of him saying my name. I much preferred the French pronunciation of Jacqueline--Jack-leen--to plain old American Jackie, but Jack could call me Gertrude or Hortense for all I cared. "So you do remember." Excerpted from And They Called It Camelot: A Novel of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis by Stephanie Marie Thornton All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.