Monday, April 15, 2024

An Unfinished Love Story by Doris Kearns Goodwin

AN UNFINISHED LOVE STORY by Pulitzer Prize–winning author Doris Kearns Goodwin is indeed “A Personal History of the 1960s,” and it is a truly fascinating one. I had no idea that her husband was Dick Goodwin, an advisor and speechwriter for both Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. The soaring rhetoric of those times is surely missed today, and Kearns Goodwin does an excellent job of recounting events from an insider perspective (she herself later was an aide and biographer for President Johnson), complete with numerous excerpts and commentary from other public service contemporaries. In addition to sharing insights about the Kennedy administration, Kearns Goodwin documents the shock coupled with necessary planning and preparations after his assassination. She discusses international policy as well as the development of domestic programs like Johnson’s Great Society. Here, for example, is a short excerpt from the Voting Rights speech which Dick Goodwin wrote and Johnson delivered in an unusual address to both houses of Congress:

AN UNFINISHED LOVE STORY is highly recommended; for a sense of Kearns Goodwin’s intimate writing style, turn to this short essay about LBJ’s decision to not run in 1968, taken from the book and recently published in The Wall Street Journal. NOTE: beginning in October, The Briscoe Center for American History will host an exhibition on The Goodwin Papers: “History and Fate: The Goodwins and the 1960s”

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