Product Details
Young Jackie: Photographs of Jacqueline Bouvier

Young Jackie: Photographs of Jacqueline Bouvier
By Olivia Harrison

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Product Description

An unprecedented collection of very special photographs, Young Jackie reveals Jacqueline Bouvier in childhood and young adulthood as she began to make public appearances in New York high society, but before the media onslaught that would mark her later life.

Bert Morgan started his career when Jackie was a year old and began taking her picture when she was three. This stunning collection chronicles the events of Jackie's first twenty years of life-weddings, holiday festivities, horse-riding competitions, dog shows, events big and small. Here we see Jackie alone, with her family, with her dogs, with her favorite horse, Danceuse, in riding habit and party clothes.

Capturing the beauty and poise of the woman who later would beguile the world, these photographs offer a new perspective on the life of one of the most respected and loved women of the twentieth century.

Introduction and chronology by Olivia Harrison.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #583389 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-08-26
  • Released on: 2002-08-22
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 96 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Bert Morgan (1904-1986) began his career syndicating photographs for the Chicago Tribune and the New York Daily News. By 1930, he moved on to become a prominent high society photographer whose work was published in Vogue, Vanity Fair, and Town and Country. He was also the official track photographer of the New York Racing Association.

Olivia Harrison is a writer. This is her first book.


Customer Reviews

Incredible photos of the young Jackie, for her real admirers.5
Jacqueline Kennedy, nee Bouvier, was one of the most singularly beautiful women ever to grace the American scene, and this collection of excellent photographs is an affectionate photo album of her young years. The composure and obvious self-possession of the young Jackie shines through in every photo, where her gaze invariably meets the camera as equal, if not an entirely welcome interloper in her rarefied world of privilege.

Jackie is one of those people whose adult features were pretty much perfectly formed as a child; her face would change little in the intervening years, lending an air of otherworldliness to these remarkable photographs. There is much presecience here of the woman she would become, and curiously little given away about the kind of child she was. Her beauty was as opaque as it was breathtaking, perhaps never more so than when she was young and did not yet know quite how striking she was.

If you are a fan and admirer of Jackie, this book may be the very best of its kind on the market, and really belongs on your bookshelf. It's definitely in mine!