John Fitzgerald Kennedy led the United States
for barely a thousand days, and yet he is regarded as
one of the great Presidents of all time for his brave
decisions on civil rights and international relations,
and not merely as a consequence of his tragic fate.
Kennedy steered his nation away from the brink of
nuclear war, initiated the first nuclear test ban treaty
and launched his nation on its mission to the moon and
beyond. JFK inspired a nation, particularly the massive
generation of baby boomers, injecting hope and
revitalising faith in the American dream at a time when
it was badly needed. 2013 marks the fiftieth
anniversary of Kennedy's untimely death. Martin
Sandler's The Letters of John F. Kennedy will be
the only book that focuses on letters both from and to
Kennedy. Drawn from more than two million letters on
file at the Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum,
The Letters of John F. Kennedy presents readers
with a portrait of both Kennedy the politician and
Kennedy the man, as well as the turbulent times he lived
in. The beginnings of American involvement in Vietnam, a
touch-and-go Cold War relationship with the Soviet bloc
and many other international controversies are
intertwined with Kennedy's own hushed-up health
problems, his renowned controversial personal life and
his charismatic engagement with the world of
presidential politics. Letters to and from Martin
Luther King, Jr., Eleanor Roosevelt, Nikita Khruschev,
Bertrand Russell, David Bengurian and many others are
included, as well as missives from ordinary citizens and
schoolchildren. Each letter is accompanied by lively and
informative contextualization and facsimiles of many of
the letters will appear in the text, along with
photographs and exclusive material from the Kennedy
Library and Museum.
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