The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and 82 Days that Inspired America by Thurston Clarke

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: May 2008
  • 336pp
  • Sales Rank: 73,342

    Reader Rating: (12 ratings)

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2008
    • Publisher: Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated
    • Format: Hardcover, 336pp
    • Sales Rank: 73,342

    Synopsis

    Micro-history of the final months of Robert Kennedy's campaign for office, dramatizing the events of his final summer.

    Publishers Weekly

    Forty years before Obamamania, there was another White House run that was so frenzied, reporters feared they'd be crushed to death by the electrified crowds he generated. Clarke's encyclopedic study of that short-lived, 11th-hour bid in the spring of 1968 reminds listeners that Robert F. Kennedy understood that the fanaticism toward his campaign was a transmutation of the grief the nation felt over the assassination of his brother. In less than three months, RFK became presidential in his own right, inspiring Americans with both his message of hope and unparalleled oratory gifts. It's precisely this finesse with speech that proves the greatest challenge for this audio: Pete Larkin's reading of Kennedy's addresses simply can't compete with the late politician's familiar delivery. Larkin has the daunting task of calibrating his tone so as to match the optimism of the campaign's first 81 days, while acknowledging the horror of day 82. Without doing impersonations, Larkin uses slight pitch changes to differentiate between Kennedy and others. A Henry Holt hardcover (Reviews, Mar. 31). (June)

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    Biography

    Thurston Clarke has written eleven widely acclaimed works of fiction and nonfiction, including three New York Times Notable Books. His Pearl Harbor Ghosts was the basis of a CBS documentary, and his bestselling Lost Hero, a biography of Raoul Wallenberg, was made into an award-winning NBC miniseries. His articles have appeared in Vanity Fair, The New York Times, The Washington Post and many other publications. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and other awards and lives with his wife and three daughters in upstate New York.

    Customer Reviews

    GREATby Anonymous

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    November 14, 2009: I have read many books on the Kennedys but this one really showed how much we lost as a country. I grew up with the Kennedys and I learned so much more about the man. A great book. I could not put it down.

    Robert Kennedy's Last Campaignby Dr_RRF

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    June 30, 2009: In June of 2008, on the anniversary of the assasination of Robert Kennedy, a number of news magaizines posed the question if the politics of RFK are still relevant today. Based upon Thurston Clarke's "The Last Campaign," I would have to say "yes." Clarke poses the basic question as to why RFK had the effect that he did on so many people and why he was so compelling. Kennedy cared deeply for the disadvantaged and while he himself had a very privileged upbringing, he nonetheless related to them in a very personal way. Bobby Keenedy was a very complex man within whom contradictory forces and behaviors seemed to seeth. Clarke presents a picture of RFK with warts and all although I highly recommend reading one of the biograhphies of RFK to get a more complete picture. Kennedy could be rude, crass and thoughtless and made many enemies. By the time he entered the 1968 primaries, he had undoubtly mellowed and a more caring side of him showed through. His politics, a mixture of patriotism, progressiveness and basic values, indeed resonated with so many in 1968. It is easy to mythologize the RFK legacy (as with his brother John) and speculate about how things might have been different if he had lived and been elected president. However, this ducks the hard questions such as if Kennedy would have been able to build the political support and coalitions necessary to accomplish his goals. All in all, RFK was long on hopes, intentions and ideals but rather short on details and action plans in his campaigning. Clarke does a good job of succinctly summarizing Kennedy's political legacy without turning it into a barbed commentary on contemporary politics. The broader issues of Kennedy's politics are beyond the scope of the book.


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