Jack 1939 – Francine Mathews’s story of JFK in Europe in 1939
The inspiration for the historical novel Jack 1939 came to author Francine Mathew after seeing a photograph of John Kennedy on a street in Germany in 1937. She writes this about the picture..he was….
….wearing clothes he’d probably slept in for a week, tousled hair, head thrown back , mouth opened in a grin. He was juggling fruit for the camera. He looked like a wild and free street busker without a care in the world; he was also rail thin, the bones in his face painfully prominent I forgot completely that he had ever been that young. The image haunted me for weeks. I wanted to know more about that boy….
So Francine read several books about Jack Kennedy and the Kennedy family. Based upon the facts, she wrote Jack 1939, a novel of speculative fiction that tells a tale of Jack in Europe in 1939, ostensibly traveling through Europe for the purpose of gathering information for his thesis. While actually gathering information for President Franklin Roosevelt about Hitler’s spy rings and plans as the world braces for the war to come. In the novel Jack is confronted by a sadistic killer, meets a beautiful married woman, encounters the Enigma machine and searches for a ledger stolen for a charity with information that could bring down the House of Kennedy!!
Here’s what some others say about the novel…
“A triumph: an exciting thriller, an intriguing exploration of a troubled time, and an absorbing take on the early history of one of America’s most iconic figures. Highly recommended”. Iain Pears author of An Instance of the Fingerpost
” Like JFK himself, this book is smart, sexy and unafraid to take risks. With nimble prose and easy charm. Francine Mathews leads us beyond the frontiers of history to make us believe in her version of a young Kennedy at large in a dark-world of prewar spies and secrets”. – Dan Fesperman, author of Lie in the Dark
In the Afterward of Jack 1939 Francine says that she roughly used the actual times and places that Kennedy was as he crossed Europe in 1939, gathering information for his senior thesis. For me that made this novel a whole lot better.
The book did provide a great glimpse into the early life of JFK and for me his medical problems were particularly interesting. I never knew about how fragile his health was. They did a great job of hiding that both during his Presidential campaign and his years as President.
Bottom Line: I thought that the descriptions of Jack and the Kennedy family and even Roosevelt, Hoover and Churchill were better than the storyline. I had so trouble getting through the middle of the book, but the last half of the book was better than the first half. Overall, I liked the Jack 1939 but it was not a page-turner for me. So it is a 3 star out of 5 book for me!! But well worth checking out!
Book 25 for 2016