After John F. Kennedy’s assassination, Robert Kennedy—formerly Jack’s no-holds-barred
political warrior—almost lost hope. He was haunted by his brother’s murder, and by the nation’s seeming
inabilities to solve its problems of race, poverty, and the war in Vietnam. Bobby sensed the country’s pain, and when
he announced that he was running for president, the country united behind his hopes. Over the action-packed eighty-two days
of his campaign, Americans were inspired by Kennedy’s promise to lead them toward a better time. And after an assassin’s
bullet stopped this last great stirring public figure of the 1960s, crowds lined up along the country’s railroad tracks
to say goodbye to Bobby.
With new research, interviews, and an intimate sense of Kennedy, Thurston Clarke provides
an absorbing historical narrative that goes right to the heart of America’s deepest despairs—and most fiercely
held dreams—and tells us more than we had understood before about this complicated man and the heightened personal,
racial, political, and national dramas of his times. -Amazon.com