The Works of James Reston, Jr. 1971 to 2021
  • Nineteenth Hijacker
  • About James Reston
  • Books
    • Vietnam >
      • A Rift in the Earth
      • Sherman's March and Vietnam
      • The Amnesty of John David Henderson
    • Medieval History >
      • Luther's Fortress
      • Defenders of Faith
      • Dogs of God
      • Warriors of God
      • The Last Apocalypse
      • Galileo
    • Biography >
      • The Accidental Victim
      • The Conviction of Richard Nixon
      • Collision at Home Plate
      • Lone Star
      • Our Father Who Art in Hell
      • The Innocence of Joan Little
    • Novels >
      • The Nineteenth Hijacker
    • Autobiography >
      • The Impeachment Diary
      • Fragile Innocence
  • Plays
  • Articles
    • Amnesty
    • Civil Rights and the South
    • Richard Nixon
    • Jonestown
    • Sports
    • Theatre, History, and Literature
    • Space
    • Washington D.C.
    • Hillary
    • Dallas Assassination
    • Millennium
    • Crusade and Jihad
    • 9-11
    • Presidential Impeachment
  • Other Writing
    • Book Reviews
    • Travel
    • Encounters
  • Interviews
  • Contact

Lone Star: The Life of John Connally

Published in 1989, James Reston writes about the life of John Connally.

Former navy secretary, governor of Texas and treasury secretary John Connally is roughly handled in this well-researched and absorbing biography. Reston ( Our Father Who Art in Hell ) probes Connally's campaign management of Lyndon Johnson's 1948 senatorial election, his insensitivity to blacks and Hispanics as governor, his participation in Watergate planning and stonewalling, his 1975 bribery and conspiracy trial (he was acquitted) and his 1986 declaration of bankruptcy followed by the auction of nearly $3 million in personal possessions. Reston explores in depth the symbiotic relationship between Connally and LBJ and his usefulness to President Richard Nixon, who praised, "Never has one cabinet member done more for his country in a year and a half." Connally emerges as a man of overweening vanity, ashamed of his humble background and not overly concerned with ethics. The most dramatic section of the book maintains that Lee Harvey Oswald's target was not President Kennedy but John Connally. -Publisher's Weekly

Read more in JR Obsessions!

The book can be found on Amazon.

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