Camera girl The coming of age of Jackie Bouvier Kennedy

Carl Sferrazza Anthony

Book - 2023

"Camera Girl brings to cinematic life Jackie Kennedy's years as a young woman chafing at the expectations of her family and her era as she seeks to follow her dreams of becoming a famous writer. Set primarily during the underexamined years of 1950-1954, when Jackie was 20 to 25 years old, the book recounts the extraordinary story of her late college years, coming-of-age, and her life as a young female journalist. Before she met Jack Kennedy, Jacqueline Bouvier was a columnist at the Washington Times-Herald, the paper's "Inquiring Camera Girl," who posed intelligent and amusing questions to the public on the streets of D.C. (while also snapping their photos with her unwieldy Leica camera). She then fashioned the resu...lts into a daily column, 600 of which were published in total. Carl Anthony, author and leading expert on First Ladies, uses these columns and other writings of hers from that time, as well as a trove of revealing interviews he has conducted with her friends and colleagues, to offer a fresh and modern perspective on the young woman who would later become one of the world's most beloved icons. It's a glamorous, surprising, and distinctly feminist story about a woman determining her own priorities and defining herself, told with admiration and empathy, as well as journalistic rigor and historical accuracy"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

BIOGRAPHY/Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy
2 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy Checked In
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Gallery Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Carl Sferrazza Anthony (author)
Edition
First Gallery Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
xiii, 379 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 297-367) and index.
ISBN
9781982141875
  • Part I. Eastern Seaboard
  • 1. Getting Her Camera
  • May-August 1949
  • 2. Daddy and Mummy
  • 1929-1948
  • Part II. Europe
  • 3. A New Language
  • August-October 1949
  • 4. Paris
  • October-November 1949
  • 5. The "Terrific" Vacation
  • November 1949-January 1950
  • 6. Autonomy
  • January-June 1950
  • 7. Liberté
  • June-September 1950
  • Part III. Families
  • 8. East Hampton
  • September 1950
  • 9. Newport
  • September-October 1950
  • Part IV. Writing
  • 10. George Washington University
  • October-December 1950
  • 11. Last Semester
  • January-March 1951
  • 12. Vogue
  • April-June 1951
  • 13. Lee
  • June-September 1951
  • 14. Office Clerk
  • September-December 1951
  • 15. Palm Beach
  • December 1951
  • Part V. The Paper
  • 16. The Blue Room
  • January 1952
  • 17. Out on the Street
  • February 1952
  • 18. Byline
  • March 1952
  • 19. Working Woman
  • April 1952
  • 20. A Second Dinner
  • May-June 1952
  • Part VI. The Campaign
  • 21. Hyannis Port
  • July 1952
  • 22. Summer in the City
  • August-September 1952
  • 23. Massachusetts
  • October-November 1952
  • 24. Palm Beach, II
  • November-December 1952
  • 25. Inauguration
  • January 1953
  • Part VII. Courtship
  • 26. Love and Sex
  • February 1953
  • 27. Meeting of the Minds
  • March 1953
  • 28. The Vietnam Report
  • March-April 1953
  • 29. Dating
  • April-May 1953
  • 30. Coronation
  • May-June 1953
  • 31. Engagement
  • June 1953
  • 32. Partner
  • July-September 1953
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Even before Jackie Bouvier married John F. Kennedy, she was a force to be reckoned with, according to this deeply researched biography. Spotlighting the formative period from 1949, when Jackie spent her junior year of college studying in France, to 1953, when she married JFK, historian Anthony (Why They Wore It) reveals a young woman of fierce intelligence, ambition, and persistence. After returning from France, she transferred from Vassar College to George Washington University, where she won a contest to become a junior editor in Vogue magazine's Paris office (she eventually turned the prize down). Early in her courtship with JFK (they were first introduced by mutual friends at a dinner party in 1951 but only started seriously dating after he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1952), he asked her to translate passages from a dozen "obscure, plodding" French books and compile the material into a report on the history of France's involvement in Indochina. "That Jack Kennedy asked her to do this, and the chance it offered her to demonstrate the power of her mind, was irresistible," Anthony writes. He also sheds intriguing light on Jackie's stint as a columnist for the Washington Times-Herald, the engagement she called off prior to marrying JFK, and her volatile and occasionally violent relationship with her mother. The result is a convincing and colorful reconsideration of a first lady known more for her style than her substance. (May)

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

Presidential families historian Anthony returns to Jackie Bouvier Kennedy, the subject of one of his previous books, As We Remember Her. This time, he focuses on the years 1949 to 1953, beginning with her arrival in Paris with a new Leica camera for a junior year at Smith College's study-abroad program. The book notes she longed for independence from her "privileged, but also traumatic" past after the bitter divorce of her parents, which left her determined to resist getting married herself. After winning--and declining--Vogue's prestigious Prix de Paris award (a year-long junior editorship with the magazine) because her mother didn't want her to leave the country at that time, Jackie became the Washington Times-Herald's "Inquiring Camera Girl" until forced to give up the job after becoming engaged to John F. Kennedy. Anthony mines her articles with aplomb, using the questions she posed to people on the streets of Washington, DC, as a window into her psyche. The book ends with her much-publicized marriage to Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy. VERDICT Whether she's avoiding a traffic ticket after speeding in her car named Zelda, or translating books for Kennedy's report on the history of France in Indochina, this portrait of young Jackie Bouvier shines with wit and intelligence.--Denise Miller

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

A uniquely focused portrait of the former first lady before Camelot. Prior to her marriage to John F. Kennedy, Jacqueline Bouvier (1929-1994) was an ambitious journalist and photographer, a remarkable period of her life captured in this engaging coming-of-age biography. Anthony, a former speechwriter for Nancy Reagan who has written several historical books about first ladies, digs deep into what her life was like before she became a public figure herself. He mines Bouvier's "Inquiring Camera Girl" column, which she produced for the Washington Times-Herald from 1951 to 1953, for connections to her private life and examples of what her journalistic process was like. "Instead of asking ladies at luncheons, for example, 'What do you think of Dior's spring fashion line?' she waited on a street corner for truck drivers to stop at a red light and shouted out the question," writes Anthony. "Other times she poked at what might lie beneath the surface of those with strongly defined personas, asking circus clowns, 'Does your smiling face hide a broken heart?' and 'Are you funny at home?' " Drawing on Bouvier's letters and interviews, Anthony pulls together a compelling portrait of a young woman facing both the problems of her time and timeless issues. Should she focus on her career or getting married? How can she be respectful to her problematic parents while still declaring her own adult independence? When she met then-Congressman John F. Kennedy and his family, her conflicts became more emotional, especially as she broke off an engagement and dealt with Kennedy's presidential ambitions and unorthodox courting style as well as his much-documented extramarital relationships. The fact that the book ends when Bouvier is 24 and marries Kennedy shows how impressive her early accomplishments really were. A well-crafted biography that could easily spawn both a delightful TV drama or a historical look at female journalists. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.