Mutual Contempt

Subtitle:
Lyndon Johnson, Robert Kennedy, and the Feud That Defined a Decade
Author:
Jeff Shesol
Format:
Softcover

Out of stock

United States of America


Mutual Contempt Out of stock

Short description

Drawing on previously unexamined documents, biographies and scores of interviews, this book provides a view of the two men, their times and the nature of power (Bookseller Publications Buyer's Guide)

Product details

Publisher:
W. W. Norton & Company
ISBN:
9780393318555
Publication date:
October 1998
Length:
233mm
Width:
156mm
Thickness:
27mm
Weight:
771g
Pages:
591
Illustrations:
Illustrated
Readership:
Age: 14 - 18
Illustrated:
Illustrated

Review

An extensive, minutely detailed analysis of the Lyndon B. Johnson - Robert F. Kennedy mutual-fear-and-loathing society. Entire books have been written examining Lyndon Johnson's presidency in which Robert F. Kennedy is but a very minor player. In his book, Shesol filters Johnson's entire vice-presidential and presidential careers through the lens of his hatred of Robert Kennedy and RFK's reciprocal contempt for Johnson. In his first book, Shesol, a political cartoonist, sets out to prove that from 1959 to 1968 both Kennedy and Johnson made "few important decisions without first considering" their mutual contempt, which was "the defining relationship of their political lives." Shesol offers a mountain of evidence to buttress these original claims. The book is filled to overflowing with detailed reconstructions of many of the political actions RFK and LBJ took. Shesol is correct - to a very limited degree. The two men hated each other viciously, and their hatred had an impact on some of their political decisions. Those facts are well documented here and elsewhere. But Shesol does not come close to proving that the mutual hatred was a key factor in Johnson's presidency or in Kennedy's political career. Shesol claims, for example, that Johnson's Vietnam War policymaking, by mid-1967, was "inextricably bound to the Johnson-Kennedy feud." The feud had some impact, but Shesol either ignores or cursorily mentions the many other, much more crucial factors. They include the intransigence of the Vietnamese communists, the weakness of our South Vietnamese ally, pressures from the American Joint Chiefs and from conservative Republicans, threats from China, and Johnson's strong desire to win the 1964 election and, later, enact his Great Society programs. A myopic portrait of two powerful politicians that all but ignores any actions other than their spiteful, petulant, petty personal feuding. (Kirkus Reviews)

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