From the author of the "insightful and well-crafted" (The Wall Street Journal) Kennedy and King comes a heart-wrenching and sensitive examination of the tragic loss of President John F. Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy's premature son, Patrick, and how their shared grief brought them closer together in the months leading up to his assassination. In April 1963, the White House announced that Jackie was pregnant with a sibling for Caroline and John Jr.--joyful news after years of miscarriages and a stillbirth in 1956. But on August 7th, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy was born six weeks premature and died less than two days later.
In this probing, soulful account of the struggle to save Patrick, Steven Levingston takes us inside the long-troubled relationship of Jack and Jackie as they faced one of the most difficult experiences of their marriage. With a "perceptive and eloquent" (
The Christian Science Monitor) voice, Levingston reveals how Patrick's death, tragic as it was, ultimately brought the couple closer together and set the President on a trajectory to be a better husband and father in the months leading up to their fateful campaign trip to Dallas.
In a parallel storyline, Levingston reveals the largely unknown role President Kennedy played in modernizing an important corner of American health care. After Patrick's death, he ordered studies into the primitive state of premature care and drummed up millions of dollars in government funding, igniting a revolution in treatments that over the decades have saved millions of infants thanks to the invention of baby ventilators, new drugs, and modern neonatal intensive care units.
For his definitive account of Patrick's brief but influential life, Levingston draws on first-ever interviews with doctors who treated Jackie and Patrick, in-depth revelations of the Secret Service agent in whose speeding car Jackie nearly gave birth prematurely, and on new archival documents.
Twilight of Camelot is a fresh and humanizing portrait of one of the most famous and complicated couples of the 20th century, and a pulsating drama that illuminates one of the least-known periods in Kennedy family history.
About the AuthorSteven Levingston was senior editor and nonfiction book editor for
The Washington Post. He is the author of
Barack and Joe: The Making of an Extraordinary Partnership;
Kennedy and King: The President, the Pastor, and the Battle Over Civil Rights; and
Little Demon in the City of Light: A True Story of Murder and Mesmerism in Belle Époque Paris. Before editing and writing for
The Washington Post, Levingston was business editor of the
International Herald Tribune in Paris, and an Asia correspondent in Hong Kong and a financial reporter in New York for
The Wall Street Journal. His work has also appeared in Time,
The Washington Post Magazine,
The New Yorker,
Reader's Digest, and
The Boston Globe Magazine. He has been featured on PBS
NewsHour, CNN, MSNBC, CBS, C-SPAN, and in the Netflix documentary
Amend. He founded and directed Boston University's business journalism program.