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The Secret Memoirs of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: A Novel

The Secret Memoirs of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: A Novel
By Ruth Francisco

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Product Description

Jackie Kennedy quite famously said, "I want to live my life, not record it." She remains elusive, her interior life hidden, her feelings and motivations secret. Yet who has not wondered what lay behind those sunglasses? Haven't we all wondered how Jackie felt about Jack's womanizing? How could she not have known?  How did she tolerate it?  How did her childhood passions and turbulent family life shape her choices?  How did her love of fashion and culture influence the White House?  What did she think about Marilyn Monroe? Why did she ever marry Onassis?  What made her take a job in publishing when she clearly didn't need one?  How did she endure the loss of her babies, the pressure of the Kennedy political machine, the murder of her husband, the never ending paparazzi, and the news of her imminent death? 

In this powerful, poignant, and sweeping novel, Ruth Francisco tells Jackie's story in Jackie's voice and boldly plunges into the subtext of her public life, reimagining her thoughts and feelings between the lines of recorded history.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #282176 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-12-26
  • Released on: 2006-12-26
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 368 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Affairs of state form a vague backdrop to Francisco's sordid imaginings of Jackie O's masochistic relationships with the men in her life. As a child, she idolized her philandering father, "Black Jack" Bouvier, "a tidal wave of sexuality," as much as she disliked her mother, Janet, whose highest ambition for herself and her daughters was marriage to a wealthy man. Though named "Debutante of the Year 1947," Jackie yearned to become her own person, independent of any man—that is, until she met Sen. John Fitzgerald Kennedy. From the start, her love for him is tempered with misgiving, and a sexually bleak wedding night ("disappointment settles over me like a hunter's net") launches a marriage marked by "constant humiliation" and depression. Francisco dishes up lots of graphic sex—both marital and extramarital (on JFK's part). As his occasional lover and main "political asset," Jacqueline ricochets from one heartbreak to another: infidelity, miscarriage, two stillbirths and, finally, widowhood. Upon JFK's death, she fends off sexual overtures from Bobby before she marries Aristotle Onassis, an "ugly old toad" who makes her feel safe until he turns abusive. Concluding just before Jackie's death, the novel's fictionalized peek behind Camelot will satisfy only prurient interests. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
Francisco's prose is like a dream...that throbs and twists underneath consciousness...that most anyone can...slip into and inhabit. -- EDGENewYork.com, April 8, 2006. Reviewed by Kilian Melloy

Intriguing. Imaginative. -- Orange Coast Mag., Feb. 2006. Reviewed by Marylin Hudson

Ruth Francisco underlines the power of fiction when it comes to telling the truth about who we are. -- Michael Connelly, bestselling author of

Wow, Ruth Francisco is a wonderful writer...with the heart of a poet...a major literary figure in the making. -- James Lee Burk, bestselling author of

[Francisco] portrays a three dimensional woman. She succeeds brilliantly...tastefully, with superb writing...a real winner! Not to be missed. -- MostlyFiction.com, May 1, 2006. Reviewed by Jana L. Perskie

Review

"Wow, Ruth Francisco is a wonderful writer. Her talent is enormous. She has both the eye and heart of a poet and each of her scenes is like a perfect painting. Her re-creation of biographical characters and historical places and events is amazing. I can't remember when I first read a writer of such immense ability. I think she's probably a major literary figure in the making."—James Lee Burke, author of Crusader’s Cross
 
"A piercingly intimate study..."—The Daily News
 
"Intriguing.  Imaginative.""—Orange Coast magazine
 

"… a wonderful work of research and imagination. With this book Ruth Francisco underlines the power of fiction when it comes to telling the truth about who we are."—Michael Connelly, bestselling author of Lincoln Lawyer "A convincing voice for America's most glamorous first lady.... Francisco's prose is like a dream--the sort of dream that throbs and twists underneath the consciousness of everyday life.  This is a work of fiction, but in its frayed ends and emotional rawness, it reads as true.... This is a book most anyone can admire and--more crucially--slip into and inhabit.”—Edge magazine
 
"[Francisco's] goal was to portray a three dimensional woman.  She succeeds brilliantly.... Ruth Francisco...has brought Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis to life on the pages of The Secret Memoirs... Francisco's prose is outstanding.... A real winner."—mostlyfiction.com
 
"...one of the most audacious novels of the year....The author has immersed herself in the known facts and added her own imagination to create a book that is going to please a lot of people..."—bookview.com


Customer Reviews

Riveting reading 5
Princess bride, queen, mother, widow - in this fictionalized memoir of Jackie O's life, Ruth Francisco does for Jackie what Joyce Carol Oates did for Marilyn - that is, capture the complex, passionate, intelligent woman behind the various archetypes she inhabited so fully throughout the stages of her life. Francisco delves into the not-so-glorious aspects of the life of an extremely private public figure, whom everyone "owned" and who no one really knew. I believed this was a real memoir from page 1. Loved this book, as I did Ruth Francisco's previous novels - I think she is a major literary talent in the making. Looking forward to her next book.

Outstanding historical fiction!! Powerful!5
In the author's note at the end of "The Secret Memoirs of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: A Novel," Ruth Francisco states up front that this is definitely a work of fiction. Although most events which take place within these pages have a basis in historical fact, they have been "filtered through Ms. Francisco's imagination." She tells her readers she "approached Jackie's fictional persona as an actor approaches a new role...by writing in her character's voice and imagining her thoughts and feelings." Obviously, her goal was to portray a three dimensional woman. She succeeds brilliantly!

Now, I am a confessed Jackie groupie - but a respectful one. Although I used to see her from time to time on the streets of NYC, I would never have approached her, especially knowing how important privacy was to this most private of women. I have admired Mrs. Kennedy since I was in 8th grade and so hoped that Senator John F. Kennedy and his Jackie would win the 1960 presidential election and become our first royal family. Yes, I was very young when Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy became First Lady of the United States...but I vividly remember watching her husband deliver his inspiring inaugural address on TV and later, that same evening, watching the news as photographers followed this glamorous young couple to document their victory for posterity as they made the rounds of Washington D.C.'s celebratory balls. This was a first - American royalty. And Jackie was a glorious young queen. She was just 31 years-old. I was a starry-eyed kid.

In the intervening years, with all the tragedy that has befallen the Kennedy family, I mourned with them, truly mourned. I have read various bios of Jackie and Jack, of RFK, and Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr., the patriarch - some scholarly, some lurid. We as a nation were so much more innocent back in the early 1960s. What did we know of JFK's illnesses ... his obsession with women, the painkillers and meds, the heartbreak experienced by the loving and capable young wife and mother who was also the very public First Lady of the United States? What did we know of the late blooming love that flowered between Jackie and her husband...alas...too late?

Jacqueline Kennedy, the woman who brought culture, sophistication, elegance, savoir faire to the White House and the country, was always an icon to me - but never quite real. Many times I tried to align what I knew to be factual incidents from her life with the smiling, poised woman who graced the pages of newspapers, magazines and TV screens. Ruth Francisco, to my delight, has brought Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis to life on the pages of "The Secret Memoirs." Fiction or not, I get a much more realistic feel for who she was as a person, a woman, not just what she represented. And I like and admire her more for knowing.

The author writes that her intention in writing this book was not to violate Jackie's privacy - but "to get a sense of the woman behind the myth, the human behind the icon." I thank her for doing just this and doing it well, tastefully, with superb writing. But it finally comes down to a matter of taste, doesn't it? There are many who will pan this novel because they will believe it is intrusive, vulgar - that autobiographical fiction, should never have been attempted with this dignified protagonist. I respect those who feel thus. I don't, and easily give the book a 5 STAR rating.

The story is told in the first person with Jacqueline, "Jacks," as narrator. We become acquainted with her as an adolescent. Pulled between her beloved father Black Jack, who became increasingly dissipated with alcohol, age and too many women, and the ever materialist, pragmatic Janet, her controlling mother, the young girl longed to be on her own - to travel. But money was always an issue. Her competitive relationship with sister Lee is fascinating, as are her years of freedom and study at the Sorbonne in Paris.

Obviously, extensive parts of the novel deal with her courtship and marriage to JFK. The author does a realistic job of keeping Jackie in character as she copes with what every woman fears most - a philandering man. She does so with elan and a sense of humor. I did not feel like a voyeur while reading any of this...and the novel IS unputdownable.

The assassination, the funeral, Jackie's relationships with RFK, Aristotle Onassis, her beautiful children and the loving care she bestows upon them, her own neuroses and fears...everything is here and written in a most credible manner.

Some high points: Jackie in Paris as First Lady, when she translates for Jack and DeGaulle and is a major hit with the French - a wonderful personal victory; Jackie's dealings with Marilyn...interesting and it jives with biographies I have read.

Francisco's prose is outstanding and although this is a work of fiction, it rings true. The characters, especially Jackie, are alive on the page. Most of the dialogue is excellent. When she reproaches Jack for messing-up so many women, (after Marilyn Monroe dies), he says, "I've never asked a woman to do something she doesn't want to do. I don't want to discuss this anymore, Jackie." Jackie, to herself, "I feel ashamed, for Jack, for myself. I've won the battle, but not the war. Why can't I accept his philandering as some kind of cortisone-induced stress relief? I think of what they say about the Blonde, how she's slept with hundreds of men, not for money, but out of a pitiful desperation for love. Is that it for Jack? Is it power? Sadism? I want to pound his chest, to demand to understand."

There are occasional inconsistencies, fatuous remarks, that distract. For example, when Bobby tells Jackie that LBJ will not be running for a second term, Jackie asks, "Why not?" To which Bobby responds, "Who in the hell cares? It leaves the pathway open for me." As if they did not already know the events leading up to Johnson's decision and the political opportunities that then opened for RFK. Overall, however, this is a real winner!

Unless the thought of reading a novel about Jackie Bouvier Kennedy Onassis disturbs you - "The Secret Memoirs" are not to be missed.
JANA

Behind The Veil5
This book takes us behind the widow's black veil, behind the fashionable large sunglasses into the mind and heart of an American Icon. Jackie is no longer a distant figure. Ruth Francisco presents Jackie as a woman with real feelings: passion, grief, alienation, success and fear. We, the readers are voyeurs, in the life of a woman so familiar yet so mysterious. A must read for fans of Jackie, historical fiction, love and romance or woman's studies.
With each Chapter we can conjure up in our minds the pictures of that particular time in Jackie's life that was also a part of American history from her early days as a schoolgirl to her final walk with Maurice in Central Park we get inside Jackie's mind and heart with a depth that will give you new appreciation for the suject and the author. Don't miss this one.