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From Love Field: Our Final Hours With President John F. Kennedy [Hardcover]

Nellie Connally , Mickey Herskowitz
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Oct 28 2003

"I awakened early on Friday morning, November 22, 1963. The day was gray and somber. Rain was falling....I asked John if I could ride with him to Dallas, and his reply was `certainly.` We got in the jump seats right behind the driver and secret service man in the front. I was on the driver`s side. Mrs. Kennedy was behind me. The President sat directly behind John. We were a happy foursome. I had my yellow roses; Jackie had red ones. I turned to the President as the formation of cars turned onto Elm Street and said, ` Mr. President, you certainly cannot say that Dallas does not love you.`"

Nellie Connally, wife of the late governor of Texas John Connally, shares her personal diary of the JFK assassination. While a seminal document in our nation`s history-the original document is to be archived at the University of Texas-From Love Field is, at heart, one woman`s account of a personal tragedy. Written for her children and grandchildren forty years ago in November 1963, the diary details what it took as a wife, mother, and friend to cope with an unimaginable personal and public ordeal.

With the twenty-six-page original document expertly reproduced in its entirely and an additional narrative detailing the days before and after the fatal shots, From Love Field also includes many major newsbreaking revelations that further delineate Mrs. Connally`s longstanding dispute of the Warren Commission`s findings.

Along with Mickey Herskowitz, a longtime family friend and coauthor of John Connally`s autobiography In History`s Shadow, Nellie Connally has, at last, broken her silence and given the country a personal point of view of the most controversial and disturbing chapter in its history.



Product Details


Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

"Mr. President, you certainly can't say Dallas doesn't love you!" Connally, Texas's first lady, had just said these words to President John Kennedy as they rode in their open black Lincoln when shots rang out on Nov. 22, 1963, killing the president and wounding the author's husband, Texas governor John Connally. This thin memoir, based on notes that Mrs. Connally made at the time of the shooting, offers little insight into the events of that tragic day. Her description of the security needs that changed her family's life after the assassination and of her acceptance of the Warren Commission's conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone are not of broad interest. Readers looking for memorials of President Kennedy on this 40th anniversary of his assassination have a wealth of more satisfying books to choose from.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Of the four people riding in the presidential limousine on November 22, 1963, only one survivor remains who can intimately reveal what actually occurred inside the car on that tragic day. Nellie Connally, wife of then-governor John Connally, had just turned to speak to the president when the first bullet struck. What happened next has been examined in such minute detail that one would think there would be nothing left to discover. Yet in an elegantly simple, warm, and heartfelt memoir, Connally reveals a wealth of poignant and personal details, from why Jackie Kennedy was frantically scrambling across the back of the limo during those first crucial seconds to how Jack Ruby so easily gained access to Lee Harvey Oswald. Written two days after her husband's release from the hospital, Connally's handwritten notes languished forgotten for decades. Penned not for posterity but for future generations of her own family, Connally's eyewitness recollections afford historians astounding new insights into one of this country's most defining moments. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
Format:Hardcover
The assassination of President Kennedy 40 years ago this month jolted Americans into the realization that their country would never be the same, says Wrone. This history of the 26-second Zapruder film and its role in the criminal investigation argues forcefully that Kennedy was shot by more than one person, none of whom was Lee Harvey Oswald. Wrone is neither a Warren Commission defender nor an outlandish conspiracy theorist but a careful historian who presents a strong case that the Warren Commission hastily and wrongly concluded that Oswald murdered Kennedy and that a single "magic bullet" shot both the President and Texas governor John Connally. Wrone calls Gerald Posner's influential 1993 Case Closed "one of the most error-ridden works on the assassination" but also condemns conspiracy enthusiasts like Oliver Stone for offering such shoddy speculations that the government and mainstream media often treat the work of serious assassination researchers as screeds bordering on the paranoid. Future assassination researchers will consult this fascinating history of the indelible Zapruder film. Strongly recommended for academic and most public libraries. While Lubin (art, Wake Forest Univ.) also makes some interesting comments about the Zapruder film, which he calls "a political thriller," his book offers only cursory comments about the assassination itself. Instead, he provides a series of provocative essays about how perceptions of the Kennedys have become part of our national memory. Lubin's spirited and gracefully written essays demonstrate that John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy became such dominant personalities because the public associated them with enduring themes of classical and popular culture. For example, the Kennedys, viewed as classic defenders of the poor, and The Beverly Hillbillies, the most popular TV show of 1963, were both known for poking fun at the rich. In addition, the macho image that Kennedy cultivated was enhanced by his reading Ian Fleming's best-selling James Bond novels. Following the death of the President, the Camelot myth of noble leadership and the protection of all subjects was readily accepted by a grieving nation. As Lubin shows, this myth was already ingrained in American culture, and he skillfully relates how Kennedy used it to stir the populace and create his own iconography. He also explains why these myths, reinforced by both ancient and contemporary images, remain vibrant. Strongly recommended for academic and larger public libraries. "Mr. President, you certainly can't say that Dallas doesn't love you!" These were the famously innocent last words that Nellie Connally, wife of the Texas governor, uttered to Kennedy seconds before he was killed. In a voice that is both forthright and personable, she presents her recollections of the momentous events of November 22, 1963, based on notes written shortly after the assassination but lost and not rediscovered until 1996. Nellie Connally is the last surviving dignitary who rode in that fateful presidential limo, and this memoir shows how the events of this national trauma personally affected her and the three Connally children. The reader shares her anger at seeing Lee Harvey Oswald receiving excellent medical treatment in the same hospital where President Kennedy was pronounced dead and where her husband almost died from an assassin's bullet. The three Connally children tell how they were pulled out of school that day, while rumors swirled that their wounded father was already dead. This unique account tells how Nellie Connally coped with the long recovery of her husband and how the Connally family lost its sense of security as a result of the assassination. This well-illustrated memoir by a witness to history is recommended for public libraries
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4.0 out of 5 stars Thank you, Mrs. Connally Mar 7 2004
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
The former First Lady of Texas takes an infamous blot on our history, an event that quite literally changed the world for generations to come, and put it in completely human terms. This is what happened to her and her family. This is how she remembers it. What's more, it's how she experienced it -- from both the front seat of the Lincoln Continental and the corridors of Parkland Hospital. This makes it an invaluable historical record, and a moving account written by a woman who had been fired upon in an open car and held her bleeding husband in her arms. Perhaps it is "slight." I would not have wanted her to embellish or alter her memories of those tragic days just to accommodate readers who measure a book's worth by the number of pages. I did not consider the photographs, the reproduction of her notes nor President Kennedy's undelivered speeches "filler." They lent texture and veracity to her story. And I do not see how anyone can say there is nothing "new" here. She is the only one of those three surviving passengers who discussed what happened at this length with the public. That in and of itself is "new." I appreciate this lady's gallantry and her generosity in contributing her family's history to our country's history. And I was also moved by her son John's recollections of the funeral. It was poignant to read a man nearing 60 recalling the awe, pagentry and pain he experienced while still a teen.
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1.0 out of 5 stars FROM LOVE FIELD-FINAL HOURS W/JFK Feb 7 2004
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
THIS IS A VERY DISAPPOINTING BOOK - IT COULD HAVE SERVED ITSELF BETTER AS A MAGAZINE ARTICLE - THERE IS TOO MUCH REHASHING OF OLD INFORMATION AND WHAT'S KNEW IS SLIGHT.
SAVE YOUR MONEY AND GET IT OUT OF YOUR PUBLIC LIBRARY.
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Most recent customer reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars Very disappointing
This is a surprisingly short book, and about one-third of its content is pure filler. Its narrative ends after only 139 photo-laden pages, after which Mrs. Read more
Published on Dec 19 2003
5.0 out of 5 stars first-hand account, simple and gripping
Nellie Connally's story of the fateful day in Dallas when John Kennedy was assassinated and her own husband, John Connally, was very seriously wounded, is a first-person account,... Read more
Published on Dec 1 2003 by Karen Sampson Hudson
5.0 out of 5 stars A Treasure From A Treasure
As a Texan who remembers that November day, and as one who was delighted to have John Connally as our Governor, I looked forward to reading this book when it came out. Read more
Published on Nov 30 2003 by J Keistler
5.0 out of 5 stars For The Ages
Its obvious from reading the Publisher's Weekly review above, the reviewer is a conspiracy buff, doesn't believe the Warren Commission report, and only wants the tabloid-type... Read more
Published on Nov 24 2003
5.0 out of 5 stars So touching and real
Nellie Connally is the ultimate authority on this earth=shaking tragic event. She was there! And she tells her story beautifully and with touching honesty.
Published on Nov 22 2003
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding!
History doesn't get much better than this. Here's a book written with passion and pathos from notes that Ms. Connally wrote shortly after the assasination of President Kennedy. Read more
Published on Nov 21 2003
5.0 out of 5 stars Mrs. Connally Speaks Her Views
As the last surviving member of the motorcar of two couples in which President John F. Kennedy was assassinated forty years ago, the wife of former Texas Governor John Connally... Read more
Published on Nov 13 2003 by C. W. Emblom
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