"The Kennedy Wives: Triumph and Tragedy in America's Most Public Family" by Amber Hunt and David Batcher; Lyons Press (352 pages, $16.95) (Photo courtesy Amazon)
"The Kennedy Wives: Triumph and Tragedy in America's Most Public Family" by Amber Hunt and David Batcher; Lyons Press (352 pages, $16.95) (Photo courtesy Amazon) Credit: Amazon

As the 20th century fades into memory, so does the Kennedy family. The children of Jack, Bobby and Teddy are old enough now to be grandparents themselves, and although a number of them followed their fathers into public life, none have achieved anything like the prominence of that charismatic trio of brothers โ€” and their ambitious family patriarch.

Yet there was much more to the Kennedy mystique than the doomed brothers. In this taut, brisk volume, newly issued in paperback, Amber Hunt and Minneapolis author David Batcher look at the Kennedy dynasty through the eyes of the women who were an essential part of its myth.

Their glamour, intelligence, toughness โ€” and ability to turn a blind eye to spousal misdeeds โ€” were crucial factors in creating the image of a rollicking clan of happy political warriors.

Drawing exhaustively on published work and original research in the Kennedy archives, the authors crisply tell the tales of Rose, Jackie, Ethel, Joan and Vicki, Tedโ€™s second wife. Wildly different in character, the five women nonetheless are bound by common threads of dutiful service, grace under pressure and devotion to family and faith.

Rose, Ethel and Vicki are forceful personalities who maintain their own identities and gleefully trade sharp elbows with the men. Jackie and Joan, publicly dutiful, privately mourn the slow dissolution of their marriages as their husbands immerse themselves in affairs of state and sex.

The authorsโ€™ approach is journalistic rather than literary; thereโ€™s a rather relentless accumulation of facts, and precious little attempt to tie them all together in a grand theme. But thatโ€™s fine, in this readerโ€™s eyes. The authors consistently choose fascinating tidbits for their tale. For example, they chronicle Jackieโ€™s early shock at her husbandโ€™s compulsive womanizing: โ€œAfter the first year together, Jackie was wandering around looking like the survivor of an airplane crash,โ€ according to a family friend.

Perhaps youโ€™re interested enough in the Kennedy women to read the many books about, or written by, each one of them. If not, this single volume should satisfy any but the deepest curiosity.