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ONCE UPON A TIME by Elizabeth Beller

ONCE UPON A TIME

The Captivating Life of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy

by Elizabeth Beller

Pub Date: May 21st, 2024
ISBN: 9781982178963
Publisher: Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster

The pursuit of an American princess.

Editor and arts journalist Beller makes her book debut with a sympathetic biography of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy (1966-1999), the wife of John Kennedy Jr., who was killed with him when their small plane crashed in 1999. As soon as Carolyn appeared in the public eye, writes the author, she was unfairly demonized as icy and “bitchy,” a characterization that Beller successfully refutes, drawing on much firsthand testimony. Because she was stunningly beautiful and a fashion icon, the media decided, “then she also must be a vapid clotheshorse.” The author clearly admires the woman she portrays as possessing “an inimitably original, wildly engrossing brand of magnetism that held those around her spellbound.” Throughout, she describes Carolyn’s stunning outfits (and lipstick and hair color) in reverential detail. Aware that people were “primed to judge her” negatively because she was so beautiful, Carolyn “went out of her way to be kind,” one friend attested, “and to make people comfortable.” An education major in college, she loved children, but she loved fashion, too, and decided to pursue that field rather than teaching. Beller recounts Carolyn’s successful career at Calvin Klein, where she first met John, who had come in for a menswear fitting. An on-again, off-again relationship culminated in their engagement, which incited a media frenzy; they married in September 1996, and “by January 1997, Carolyn could hardly do anything without intense scrutiny and its subsequent criticism.” Feeling “pursued as prey,” she refused to smile and wave. “What the tabloids often described as Carolyn’s cold demeanor can now more accurately be understood as fear,” writes the author. At the time of the crash, their marriage was strained, and Carolyn had descended into a “spiral of worry and anguish”; yet, Beller speculates, a thriving future lay ahead.

A sensitive portrait of a misunderstood public figure.