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Goodreads Top 150 Best 21st Century Nonfiction, 2022. Pulitzer Prize in History nominee, 2018. Ebook ranked second on Amazon Bestseller list, Presidents category, 2017. Updated in 2024.
While numerous books cover the 1963 crime-of-the-20th-century from a conspiracy or lone-assassin viewpoint, this work by veteran journalist Kevin James Shay presents new and old facts objectively to allow readers to better understand what happened. This updated, compelling narrative is infused with behind-the-scenes details that have been brought to light in recent years through fresh government documents…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
Goodreads Top 150 Best 21st Century Nonfiction, 2022. Pulitzer Prize in History nominee, 2018. Ebook ranked second on Amazon Bestseller list, Presidents category, 2017. Updated in 2024.

While numerous books cover the 1963 crime-of-the-20th-century from a conspiracy or lone-assassin viewpoint, this work by veteran journalist Kevin James Shay presents new and old facts objectively to allow readers to better understand what happened. This updated, compelling narrative is infused with behind-the-scenes details that have been brought to light in recent years through fresh government documents and other sources.

The book includes facts related to plots against Kennedy that occurred in Chicago, Tampa, and other cities shortly before the November 1963 assassination. For instance, suspect Thomas Vallee was arrested right before Kennedy was to visit Chicago on November 2, matching some of the same characteristics as Lee Harvey Oswald. Vallee was in Tennessee at the same time that a gunman approached Kennedy in that state in May 1963. Then Vallee soon moved to Chicago and took similar actions there as Oswald did in New Orleans and Dallas. Vallee later wrote to FBI Director Hoover, who amazingly wrote him a polite response shortly before the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy.

A different suspect in the November 18 Tampa plot, Gilberto Lopez, also featured a similar background as Oswald. Lopez traveled from Texas into Mexico soon after JFK was killed, along an escape route that Oswald tried to take, and then flew to Cuba. There were also gunmen along the proposed presidential motorcade routes in Chicago and Tampa, with Vallee and Lopez believed to be set up to take the blame should an assassination attempt be successful.

New government documents also detailed many other threats, such as statements shortly before JFK's assassination by a CIA courier on how Kennedy and his presumed assassin would both be killed. Another aspect not covered in most books is the involvement of Willie Somersett. The Klan leader opposed the racial violence in the 1960s to the point that he risked his life exposing and helping to prevent it as a government informant. He likely helped save and prolong the Kennedys' and King's lives.

Finally, this book shows how some justice in the case has been served. Several prime suspects in the Mafia, CIA, and Cuban community received prison sentences for other crimes, similar to how gangster Al Capone was imprisoned for tax evasion.

Shay grew up in Dallas and has researched the tragedy since 1978. He witnessed President John F. Kennedy's funeral in Washington, D.C., where he was born on JFK's birthday. He first became interested in the case when eyewitness Bill Newman entered his college newspaper office and led him on a search.


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Autorenporträt
Kevin James Shay remains one of the few in his generation to actually use his journalism degree - earned from the University of North Texas in 1981 - for almost four decades. He has worked or written for more than 40 newspapers, blogs, and magazines, including The Dallas Morning News, The Washington Post's Gazette, AOL, One World News Service, Minority Business News USA, Texas Catholic, Dallas Times Herald, Medium, and Alternet.
His books include Operation Chaos: The Trump Coup and the Campaign to Erode Democracy [2021], Death of the Rising Sun: A Search for Truth in the JFK Assassination [2017], It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Trip: On the Road of the Longest Two-Week Family Road Trip in History [2014], Walking through the Wall [2012], A Parent's Guide to Dallas/Fort Worth [2003], and And Justice For All: The Untold History of Dallas [2000].
Shay has met and interviewed Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Robert Redford, Al Gore, Colin Powell, Oprah Winfrey, Jesse Jackson, Magic Johnson, and Tiger Woods, among others. He has exposed systemic racism in politics, government waste, psychiatric facility abuse, contracting inequities, and other societal ills. He was kicked out of the former East Germany several times, detained by authorities in the former Yugoslavia, and strip searched by guards at Los Angeles International Airport.
Shay has received awards from numerous professional and community organizations, including Lincoln University's Unity Awards in Media, Maryland-Delaware-Washington, D.C. Press Association, Dallas Press Club, Bethesda Literary Festival, Texas Press Association, American Cancer Society, Local Media Association, Suburban Newspapers of America, and Mental Health Association.
An avid traveler, he drove his kids through 22 states and 6,950 miles across the United States and back in 17 days. That trip was certified as the most miles driven by one driver on a family road trip in roughly two weeks by a world record organization. He also walked some 5,000 miles across the United States and Europe as part of a group that set a record for the longest group walk for a cause in 1984 and 1985.
Shay also does some photography and collects art, rare books, autographs, and other memorabilia. One of his landscape works placed fourth in its division in the Texas State Fair and was exhibited there. An Eagle Scout, he has been active in community organizations, including as a board member of the ACLU and Rainbow Bridge, Scouting adult ...