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TED KENNEDY by John A. Farrell Kirkus Star

TED KENNEDY

A Life

by John A. Farrell

Pub Date: Oct. 25th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-525-55807-1
Publisher: Penguin Press

Farrell delivers a comprehensive biography of the late senator.

Ted Kennedy (1932-2009), writes biographer and former White House correspondent Farrell, was “a warm, playful human being who loved dogs, good times, song, and devilry.” As a young man, he was health-conscious, abstemious, and a hard worker, though the least of a family deeply embedded in politics. His habits and mindset changed after the assassination of his brothers John and Bobby, when, as one family friend put it, “Much against his will…[Ted] was suddenly the head of this extraordinary family, a position he never aspired to and never expected.” He bore that burden by womanizing and drinking, which became a troublesome hallmark. His political career was not always successful. Working on JFK’s presidential campaign, he found himself in above his head, and the Denver Post blamed him for Kennedy’s loss in Colorado. During that time, though married, he tried to seduce a woman named Judith Campbell only to be bested in the effort by JFK, who “reveled…at having beaten Teddy to the prize.” His first run for public office stirred up outrage among some for the offense of “trading on his brother’s name.” Yet, in his decades in the Senate, he forged working alliances on both sides of the aisle and helped craft significant legislation—e.g., the foundations of the Affordable Care Act. Farrell looks closely at some little-known aspects of Kennedy’s career, including his refusal to run as Hubert Humphrey’s vice president in 1968, which, Farrell suggests, might have enhanced Kennedy’s role as a national candidate and certainly would have changed the course of history. As this lengthy but engrossing narrative reveals, Kennedy, whom Senate colleague Alan Simpson called “one of the orneriest sons of bitches around,” got plenty done, including adding a prescription drug benefit to Medicare.

An exemplary study of a life of public service with more than its share of tragedies and controversies.