Wednesday, March 9, 2011

A Certain Type of Book

Any major world event will, in time, attract the interest of historians and other professional analysts. We expect this. We expect them to sift through the record, official and unofficial, and tell us what it all means.

The assassination of JFK is a case in point. It is unique, though, in that it has always attracted a disproportionate number of non-professionals. Historically it has been the non-professionals who have found serious flaws in the government's lone nut thesis, and argued against it. And it has been the professionals, the historians and journalists, who by and large have endorsed it.

Estimates vary on how many books have been published on the assassination. They range from many hundreds into the thousands. I doubt very much there is an accurate tally. There may have been at one time, but with the advent of print-on-demand and other means of self-publication, a tidal wave (dare I call it a title wave?) has engulfed us.

Most of these books, and certainly the best, have been written by the non-professionals.

From time to time I see lists of what various writers consider the best books on the subject, usually in the form of a "top ten" list. I have crafted one of my own. Like all such lists, it is highly subjective. Any one entry is likely to provoke sharp disagreement.

I present my list below. But first, I've also assembled a list of really bad books about the JFK assassination. They may or may not be the worst. In fact, several of them are quite literate, and thus might be convincing to those unfamiliar with all of the evidence. This is a great danger to the truth. Uninitiated readers enter the landscape at their peril.

So here are some really bad books about the JFK assassination, presented in no particular order.
  1. Case Closed, by Gerald Posner
  2. Reclaiming History, by Vincent Bugliosi
  3. Mrs. Paine's Garage, by Thomas Mallon
  4. Eyewitness to History, by Howard Brennan (with J. Edward Cherryholmes)
  5. Death of a President, by William Manchester
  6. The Day Kennedy was Shot, by Jim Bishop
  7. The Truth About the Assassination, by Charles Roberts
  8. The Scavengers and Critics, by Richard Lewis and Lawrence Schiller
  9. Final Disclosure, by David Belin
  10. Conspiracy of One, by Jim Moore
  11. With Malice, by Dale Myers
  12. The Warren Report
Some really good books about the JFK assassination:
  1. JFK and the Unspeakable, by James W. Douglass
  2. Accessories After the Fact, by Sylvia Meagher
  3. Conspiracy, by Anthony Summers
  4. The Last Investigation, by Gaeton Fonzi
  5. Rush to Judgment, by Mark Lane
  6. On the Trail of the Assassins, by Jim Garrison
  7. A Citizen's Dissent, by Mark Lane
  8. Let Justice Be Done, by William Davy
  9. The Bastard Bullet, by Raymond Marcus
  10. Spy Saga, by Philip Melanson

My lists are rather arbitrary, and I'm probably overlooking a few titles I would include if I gave it serious thought. But if I haven't read a given book, I haven't included it. I don't consider either list the very worst or the very best. Such is the nature of a subjective list.

Also, there are pro-conspiracy books that, in my opinion, are not of much value (if any). But that's another list for another time.


Some of the titles on these lists of books, good and bad, are worth additional commentary. See, for example, my review "Bugliosi's Book" elsewhere on this blog. I'll have some comments on some of the other titles in the not-too-distant future.

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