Lincoln and Kennedy
A Pair to Compare
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- £8.99
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- £8.99
Publisher Description
President Abraham Lincoln grew up in a one-room log cabin. President John F. Kennedy was raised in the lap of luxury. One was a Republican and one a Democrat. They lived and served a hundred years apart.
Yet they had a number of things in common. Some were coincidental: having seven letters in their last names. Some were monumental: Lincoln's support for the abolitionist movement and Kennedy's support for the civil rights movement. They both lost a son while in office. And, of course, both were assassinated.
In this illuminating book, Gene Barretta offers an insightful portrait of two of our country's most famous presidents.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Barretta (Timeless Thomas: How Thomas Edison Changed Our Lives) compares Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy in a project that provides an adequate overview of their lives, but can't help but evoke the (oft-debunked and derided) lists circulated online for years that dwell on superficial coincidences between the men and their presidencies. Employing visual and verbal parallels throughout, Barretta's caricatured illustrations and conversational narrative highlight the discrepancies and similarities between Lincoln and Kennedy throughout their lives, from their childhoods to how they met their wives, the tragic losses of family members, their career explorations, and their ascents to the presidency; Barretta compares Lincoln's role in the abolishment of slavery to Kennedy's efforts in support of civil rights, before examining their respective challenges during the Civil War and Cold War. Endnotes provide additional trivia about and quotations from both presidents, but a bulleted list of coincidences "Lincoln was shot in Ford's Theatre; Kennedy was shot riding in a Lincoln (made by the Ford Motor Company)" feels more targeted to budding conspiracy theorists than historians. Ages 6 10.