Ever since me and my buddies hopped in a car to motor off to
the movie theaters three decades ago I’ve had an on-again, off-again
fascination with the JFK assassination. Or maybe that movie we motored off to
see was Oliver Stone’s The Doors and
not Oliver Stone’s JFK. In any event,
I did see the Stone movie in theaters, and that was the first time I really
encountered all the conspiracy conculabula clouding the demise of our 35th
president.
I was hooked.
I have since, however, been convinced to a viewpoint about
175 degrees contrary to Mr. Stone’s.
Still, I revisit the assassination every couple of years.
Since moving to Texas fourteen months ago, to a town a
half-hour north of those momentous events of November 1963, I’ve delved into it
a few times. For instance, I’ve been to Dealey Plaza three times. I read an
ancient New York Times compendium of Warren Commission testimonies I’ve had on
the shelves forever. The Mrs. bought me tickets on Father’s Day for the Sixth
Floor Museum at the Texas School Book Depository later this fall. And now I
found Vincent Bugliosi’s Four Days in November
at a nearby bookstore and cracked it open this weekend.
After reading a half-dozen or so conspiracy books (from the
respectable Six Seconds in Dallas to the
literary Oswald’s Tale to the insane,
off-the-wall Crossfire: The Plot that
Killed Kennedy) I weeded myself from the fringe with Gerald Posner’s Case Closed and Vincent Bugliosi’s Reclaiming History. Both these latter
books just made more damn sense to me than any of the conspiracy books I read
or shows and movies I watched.
Posner’s book was a crisp and concise debunking of much of
the myths and exaggerations of the assassination. Bugliosi’s Reclaiming History does the same, only
in much, much more depth and detail. His book is at least four times as lengthy
as Posner’s. He examines everything – not a Stone is unturned. As I recall,
having read the book nearly a decade ago, it was so damn heavy I found that
after I read one hundred page section, I was convinced of the Lone Gunman
Theory and realized I needn’t strain my bracchioradiali and read any more.
Now Four Days in
November sits in my hands. The back
cover states it’s “drawn from Reclaiming
History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy, a monumental and
historic account of the event and all the conspiracy theories it spawned.” It may
well indeed be. Four Days is a
moment-by-moment breakdown, in ten or twenty minute intervals, of the actions
of all the principle players in the events that occurred that November in
Dallas in 1963.
I started last night and am already nearly 50 pages in.
About a tenth done.
It won’t change my mind one way or the other (probably will
solidify the Lone Gunman Theory in my mind from about a 95 to 97 percent probability).
But it will refresh my memories of the long strange cast of characters which I
will come into contact again this Fall during my visit to the TSBD Sixth Floor
Museum.
For the record, though I’ve purchased 12 or 15 books on the
assassination, I’ve only read a handful of those and gave most of them away to
the V.A. when we moved down to Texas. Most of what I know of the assassination
I learned online at a variety of websites. There’s lots of cyber rabbit holes
to fall down into; trust me, I’ve fallen down my share over the years.
Anyway, after Four
Days in Dallas, I plan on hitting WW2 again, hard. I have a books on
submarine warfare, the Battle of Kursk, high-end strategy on why the Allies
won, and a compendium of mini-biographies of the major military personalities
of the war. I’m also working my way through an omnibus of 1976’s best SF short
stories and, after that, will throw my hat in the ring and take a swing at one
of Terry Goodkind’s mega-opuses of fantasy as a first-time reader.
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