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Jacqueline Bouvier : an intimate memoir / John H. Davis.
LIBRA - Athenaeum of Philadelphia Circulating CT275.O552 D44 1996
Available from offsite location
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Davis, John H.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy, 1929-1994--Childhood and youth.
- Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy.
- Celebrities--United States--Biography.
- Celebrities.
- Presidents' spouses--United States--Biography.
- Presidents' spouses.
- Genre:
- Biographies.
- Physical Description:
- xiii, 208 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- New York : J. Wiley, c1996.
- Summary:
- Extraordinarily intimate and touching, Jacqueline Bouvier is a tale of two childhoods. Davis's mother and Jackie's father were sister and brother, and John Davis and Jacqueline, born just weeks apart, spent their summers together on their grandfather's East Hampton estate and frequently met at family holiday gatherings. Secure in the heart of privilege, they grew up in the gilded townhouses and grand ballrooms of New York City, the equestrian circles of Long Island, and the mansion society of Newport. Jackie's mother, Janet Lee, a highstrung and strong-willed young woman, had been determined to marry into Society. She did, after meeting the dashing playboy stockbroker John "Black Jack" Bouvier, whose family could trace its American roots back more than a century. Jacqueline's Grandfather Bouvier was a gentleman of the old school who kept a household where strict rules of dress and decorum were enforced. He instilled in his grandchildren a deep sense of aristocratic lineage, a characteristic that would influence Jackie's highly developed aesthetic sense and extraordinary strength of character. Ironically, Jackie's maternal grandfather, James T. Lee, was a self-made millionaire whose rise from rags to riches oddly paralleled that of her future father-in-law, Joseph P. Kennedy. Jacqueline Lee Bouvier was born on July 28, 1929. Her idyllic early childhood - she became a passionate equestrienne, winning her first blue ribbon at the age of five - was shattered by her parents' bitter divorce when she was only seven years old. The ensuing emotional tug-of-war for her loyalty and devotion, fueled by her own conflicting feelings for her overly critical mother and her overly indulgent father, would haunt Jackie even on the day of her wedding to John Kennedy in 1953. From her father's unpublished letters to her come new insights into their fateful relationship. After attending Vassar, the Sorbonne, and Georgetown, Jackie worked as an inquiring photographer for a newspaper in Washington, D.C., and it was here that the vibrant, ambitious young woman encountered the young congressman from Massachusetts. Their courtship would culminate in what Life magazine dubbed "The Wedding of the Year." At that moment, the intensely private young woman began a new life as one of the most famous public figures of the century.
- Contents:
- The Years of Bliss
- The Years of Dismay
- The Divorce
- The Remarriage
- A Divided Life
- The Death of Grampy Jack
- Vassar and The Sorbonne
- One Special Summer
- The Inquiring Camera Girl
- "The Wedding of the Year."
- Acknowledgments
- Photo Credits
- Index.
- Notes:
- Includes index.
- Local Notes:
- Athenaeum copy: Miller Fund bookplate.
- ISBN:
- 0471129453 (cloth : alk. paper)
- OCLC:
- 34076480
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