
I visited an acquaintance of mine about two weeks ago. He happens to own a used bookstore. Of course I have far too many books now, but there’s always room for another good find.
We talked for a bit about kids and college and politics and eventually we moved, naturally, into booktalk, which, naturally, led us to his groaning shelves in search of a book.
The search didn’t produce the book we were looking for, but after my acquaintance walked away to take a phone call, my wondering eye spied a thick, black book spine cover with the title of A Thousand Days printed across it.
The full title is A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House written by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. I had recently read Schlesinger’s Journals, published posthumously by his sons, and was deeply fascinated by them.
A Thousand Days won the 1966 Pulitzer Prize for biography and, from all that I’d read about it, was one of the best books written about President Kennedy the man, the candidate, the leader, and the President. Certainly a book written by an Administration insider and admirer will reflect the writer’s biases, for which, I think it’s fair to say that Schlesinger was well aware of as a professional historian.
But this particular memoir/biography, I think, has become particularly attractive given the times we find ourselves in. I think there’s a need to be reading books about Presidents that, while not perfect, brought high ideals, intelligence, grace, dignity, and visionary leadership to the highest office in the land.
And so, in the quiet of the early morning (0630 when I took picture above), I began a 1000 day journey.
Have you seen this blog? If you are interested in presidential bios, this blog has a wealth of information. The author just recently completed his journey reading bios about all the presidents. I think you will enjoy the site, if you don’t already know about it. Here is the page on the reviews of JFK.:
https://bestpresidentialbios.com/2017/08/31/the-best-biographies-of-john-f-kennedy/
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Thank you! Recently I began to prune my library down some. I find I can’t part with the biographies and memoirs. It’s my favorite genre. I appreciate the link!
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I couldn’t agree more with the need to educate ourselves on past presidencies, most especially in this day and time. Great write-up, Jeff!
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Thanks Jon! You’re kind. No man is perfect and Presidents are no exception, but we’ve never seen anything like what we have now!
We need to read about Presidents, who, while flawed, tried to rise to the level of gravitas and responsibility of the American Presidency and the world leadership position it stands for.
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Agreed. Some notable examples come to mind: Harry Truman, Ike Eisenhower, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter…. Young people especially need to read about these Presidents.
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