Where Were You?

America Remembers The JFK Assassination

By (author) Gus Russo, Harry Moses Foreword by Tom Brokaw

Publication date:

05 January 2014

Length of book:

416 pages

Publisher

Lyons Press

ISBN-13: 9780762794560

November 22, 1963. A policeman’s wife was fetching their sick child from school. A young shoe store manager had no idea what lay in wait for him that day. A future president was tending to his farm. A future vice president was standing on the steps of his college library. A Georgetown student was looking forward to playing the piano for the president when he returned to Washington, DC, that evening. A future movie star was attending his second-grade art class.
     Then the news rang out across airwaves, through telephone lines, and by word of mouth, plunging the country into shock and sorrow. It’s hard to imagine how the last fifty years would have unfolded if President John F. Kennedy had lived. Would Vietnam have dragged on until 1974? Would Nixon have come into power? It’s difficult to say—but, combining evocative archival images with the unique, first-person stories of those who lived through it, Where Were You? says what the history books can’t and offers a fresh look at what was, what is, and what might have been since that fateful day.
    In the two-hour NBC documentary event that this volume accompanies, special correspondent Tom Brokaw interviewed people close to the tragedy as well as former heads of state, politicians, authors, journalists, performers, musicians, and more. He asked them five simple questions, starting with: Where were you? Together, their words paint a rich and moving picture of a hopeful nation torn asunder by grief. It will remind those who lived it of a pivotal moment in American history, and it bears witness for all who follow.

An American Profile Editor's Pick

"A living time capsule ... Where Were You? tackles the Kennedy saga as a human interest story. ... The most compelling contributions are by little known players in the drama such as Buell Frazier, the unlucky co-worker of the alleged assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, and Marie Tippit, widow of the policeman whom Oswald also murdered that day."
Costco Connection

"The compelling mix of voices paints a vivid portrait."
American History magazine

"These intense episodes of remembrance make for a gripping collection that most people with an interest in JFK will want to read."
Library Journal, starred review

"Moving and powerful ... The themes of remembrance and appreciation remain constant throughout these pieces—all relevant and compiled with care. An engrossing, politically charged accompaniment."
Kirkus Reviews