Every summer I visit my parents and browse their bookshelves. Each summer I select a few books that I deem short enough to read during my time visiting them, but then I turn on my vacation switch and prioritize hours spent at the beach. I know many people can read at the beach, but I choose not to. It is my balm, staring at the water, occasionally foraying into the water when the air temperature is hot enough to my liking. I can’t exactly say that Lake Michigan is my North Star, but its serenity gives me strength for the upcoming school year ahead. Generally, the books I select off those shelves remain untouched; however, this year I spontaneously decided on two separate trips to the beach. My body craved it. That said, the book I have attempted to read for the last few years since I began my Pulitzer project came home with me. The intellectual reading that I cannot read at the beach can easily get done from the comfort of my couch. That is how I finally managed to read Profiles in Courage by President John F. Kennedy. My mother, or more likely my grandmother, paid thirty five cents for it at the time of the edition’s publication. Even though I knew I would be reading Camera Girl upon my return home, I would not allow Profiles in Courage to go unread for another year. Suffice it to say, the words contained in this short volume are worth well more than thirty five cents.
In 1952, then senator elect Kennedy became just the third democrat elected to the senate from the state of Massachusetts. At the time, his father and then steady date had eyes on the White House. All who had come into contact with Jack Kennedy marveled in his charisma and intellect, a perfect combination for a newly elected senator with eyes on a higher office. Both Jack and Jackie loved to read a wide range of topics from literature to history; he let it be known to her that one of his political heroes was Sam Houston. For his first birthday that they were together, Jackie gave Jack a copy of The Raven: The Life of Sam Houston by Marquis James, the 1932 Pulitzer winner in biography. While many would say that this celebrity romance was meant to be, the literary person that I am believe that their engagement had been cemented after this gift. The two shared a love for literature and the arts that is overlooked in many superficial accounts written about them despite the fine arts awards et al bearing Kennedy’s name. After his marriage and still during his first term in the senate, Kennedy opted for surgery in 1954 to repair an injury he sustained during his famous PT boat rescue. During the extra time he had during this convalescence period, Kennedy along with two of his former Harvard professors as well as Jackie began research on what would become Profiles in Courage. The theme: courage of former senators who went against sectional or party lines at the expense of their careers. Even with his eyes on the ultimate prize, Kennedy valued the men who preceded him in the senate and set about to honor them.
Profiles in Courage is a book in four parts, each of which presents a time and place where the story takes place. In another life Jack Kennedy could have been a history professor or writer. Many readers note that “this book only won the Pulitzer because he is the president,” but I beg to differ. For one, the first publication of this book occurred in 1957, before Kennedy got elected to a second term as senator. Spending extended time rehabbing from surgery, that second election was no sure thing. Second, the prose in certain sections of the text equals history written by more famous history writers like McCullough, who are known for their story telling skills. When I pick up a history book, I know from the first few pages if the book is going to be cut and dry or a scintillating story resembling the best fiction. Profiles in Courage lies somewhere in the middle, and, perhaps, Kennedy’s standing as a senator gave it an extra nudge that it probably didn’t need. I posed this question to two branch librarians who I trust, and our consensus opinion is that politicians of today write memoirs that are a laundry list of their lives. The reader does not come away with a better understanding of who the person is away from the halls of Washington. Kennedy states his opinion about what courage is and why it is important for a senator to demonstrate this character trait. He opines on this at crucial junctures in the nation’s history when senators were great orators, and mothers still dreamed of their sons growing up to serve their nation in politics. By the time Kennedy entered the senate, this era of the senator as superstar had long passed, but he lauds his predecessors just the same. Published just before his second election to the senate and that famed presidential run, readers came away knowing a tad more about Jack Kennedy as a person.
Profiles in Courage won the Pulitzer for biography, not for history, as it tells of eight senators who did what they believed was the correct choice for their nation at the time. They did so at all stages of their political careers, and the majority realized that these courageous choices would see the end to their time in politics. Kennedy includes his hero Sam Houston as the centerpiece, although it must have been difficult to select a keynote selection to the book. Many remember Sam Houston as the first governor of Texas after fighting at the Alamo, a patriot for statehood. Houston was first and foremost a Texan, but he was also an American citizen, and he alone in the Texas legislature voted against secession because he wanted to preserve a union that he valiantly fought for. His decision in hand, Houston’s time as governor of Texas had ended because the other politicians in the state believed in southern rights and chose to join the confederacy. Kennedy states Daniel Webster’s March 7, 1850 speech on the senator as crucial in preserving the union at that time. He cites the alliance between Webster, Henry Clay- the great orator, and John C. Calhoun as paramount in preventing war, although farseeing people at the time surmised the inevitable. The three, from distinct regions of the nation, served during an era when the senate rivaled the presidency as the premiere office in the land. The general public could enter the gallery to hear these speeches that today are equal only in the prose delivered by top authors; a different, high brow era, the courage of these celebrity senators attempted to hold the union together through compromise. They would keep their places in the senate at a great cost to them. Today, their joint decision in unity would have spelled the end to their time in office. I could continue to cite examples of courage by politicians in an attempt to preserve the integrity of this nation, but that is the crux of this book that did just that, what any quality biography should do. Politicians writing “memoirs” or “biographies” today would do well to take a page from Kennedy’s book and speak of character, rather than just stating the events in their lives that any learned person could easily discover. Writing of courage in this climate would be a courageous thing to do, and, by doing so, readers learned more about the man behind presidential candidate Kennedy.
During high school, Thirteen Days was required reading but not Profiles in Courage. In hindsight, Thirteen Days would be a more compelling book for teenagers, whereas even the most studious of students would probably gloss over the compelling words here. Now that I have finally read the book I usually select first from my parents’ book shelf, I will have to hone in on other volumes that more often than not go unread over the summer. One has to be in the correct mindset to both write and read. Then Senator Kennedy, as learned as he was, could not have written Profiles in Courage when undertaking his daily commitment as senator. It took convalescing from surgery to finally research and put his thoughts in order to write this award winning biography, albeit a slim one. Just as the Senator could not take time away from his job to write, I could not focus on his eloquent words while in my beach zone; however, in the day to day grind of daily life, his poignant nonfiction read like a story. Critics will debate whether this merited a Pulitzer or not for eternity because that is what critics are apt to do. I do believe that Profiles in Courage merited the award regardless of the writer’s station in life. The writing is that good, a facet of Kennedy’s life that got overlooked during his life constantly played out in the limelight.
5 stars