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"Everybody—young, old—everybody relates to these photographs," she says.
The book's release 44 years after the so-called "Camelot" era shows that Americans' love of the Kennedys hasn't faded with time.
Presidential historian Robert Dallek, author of An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917 – 1963, wrote the foreword to The Kennedys and believes that the desire to see these photos has to do with not only an American love for the Kennedy family, but with the country's current mood.
"I think the country has a yearning for optimism and better days, better times and I think they still very much find that in John Kennedy and his family," Dallek says. "It always boosts you up when you can reach out to the past and find a heroic figure and family that makes you think of better days."
According to Dallek, people associate John F. Kennedy with a better national mood, a greater promise and a greater hope. Kennedy remains a kind of highlight, or bright spot on the national horizon, he says.
"They're the symbols of what is best about America," says Dallek. "They're our American royalty."


Comments
What could have been! It's like taking a quick trip back in time and hoping to be able to stop that moment that neither John nor Jackie Kennedy could foresee. A sad time that hauntingly colors our memories.
Posted by AUDREY BASLER on November 27,2007 | 05:37PM
Thanks for sharing from such an awesome time in America; such sad memories, and yet such happy times as well. We've not had such a relationship with the First Family since!
Posted by Rebecca S. Ford on November 30,2007 | 04:43PM