cover image Camera Girl: The Coming of Age of Jackie Bouvier Kennedy

Camera Girl: The Coming of Age of Jackie Bouvier Kennedy

Carl Sferrazza Anthony. Gallery, $29.99 (400p) ISBN 978-1-982141-87-5

Even before Jackie Bouvier married John F. Kennedy, she was a force to be reckoned with, according to this deeply researched biography. Spotlighting the formative period from 1949, when Jackie spent her junior year of college studying in France, to 1953, when she married JFK, historian Anthony (Why They Wore It) reveals a young woman of fierce intelligence, ambition, and persistence. After returning from France, she transferred from Vassar College to George Washington University, where she won a contest to become a junior editor in Vogue magazine’s Paris office (she eventually turned the prize down). Early in her courtship with JFK (they were first introduced by mutual friends at a dinner party in 1951 but only started seriously dating after he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1952), he asked her to translate passages from a dozen “obscure, plodding” French books and compile the material into a report on the history of France’s involvement in Indochina. “That Jack Kennedy asked her to do this, and the chance it offered her to demonstrate the power of her mind, was irresistible,” Anthony writes. He also sheds intriguing light on Jackie’s stint as a columnist for the Washington Times-Herald, the engagement she called off prior to marrying JFK, and her volatile and occasionally violent relationship with her mother. The result is a convincing and colorful reconsideration of a first lady known more for her style than her substance. (May)