U. S. History Archives - The History Reader : The History Reader https://www.thehistoryreader.com/category/us-history/ A History Blog from St. Martin’s Press Wed, 07 Jan 2026 07:20:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/favicon.png U. S. History Archives - The History Reader : The History Reader https://www.thehistoryreader.com/category/us-history/ 32 32 Featured Excerpt: Tom Paine’s War https://www.thehistoryreader.com/historical-figures/featured-excerpt-tom-paines-war/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=featured-excerpt-tom-paines-war Tue, 06 Jan 2026 08:00:56 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=11046 by Jack Kelly In 1776, Tom Paine’s words—and the determination of American patriots—allowed our nation to survive its first crisis. A tribute to the Revolution’s 250th anniversary, Tom Paine’s War is a riveting exploration of our nation’s birth. It reveals how the power of words—and the power of belief—both speak as well to America’s current crisis. Read Read More »

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by Jack Kelly

In 1776, Tom Paine’s words—and the determination of American patriots—allowed our nation to survive its first crisis. A tribute to the Revolution’s 250th anniversary, Tom Paine’s War is a riveting exploration of our nation’s birth. It reveals how the power of words—and the power of belief—both speak as well to America’s current crisis. Read on for a featured excerpt!


Prologue

Although summer’s days were numbered, on September 15, 1776, a dirty, unwelcome heat still blanketed the region around New York City. Men sweated in their wool uniform coats; women, in their stays and gowns.

Americans were in their second year of war. The conflict that had begun accidentally at Lexington, Massachusetts, in April 1775 had initially seemed to many a continuation of the disturbances that had roiled the colonies for a decade. Americans had endured the Stamp Act riots, the slaying of five Boston patriots by regular troops, the dumping of the tea, the boycotts and the debates.

With the bloody battle at Bunker Hill, the patriots’ ultimately futile invasion of Canada, and George Washington’s successful effort to drive the British army out of Boston in March 1776, the war had taken on a more serious aspect. But most citizens still felt that it would ultimately be settled by reconciliation with the mother country.

Then came Common Sense. In January 1776, the pamphlet became the fastest-selling publication ever distributed in the colonies. It did not mince words or argue for compromise. It stated flat out that monarchy, the dominant form of European government for centuries, was an artifice by which a small group of dishonest men gained ascendency over the majority. The king was a fraud. The tradition of hereditary aristocracy was a device that robbed common people of the fruits of their labor and of their rightful inheritance. The goal of Americans should not be to find accommodation with Britain, the author insisted, but to permanently break all bonds and declare themselves free and independent states. The blood of the slain, the weeping voice of nature cries, ’Tis time to part.

Painting of Thomas Paine by Laurent Dabos. National Portrait Gallery (London). Public domain.
Painting of Thomas Paine by Laurent Dabos. National Portrait Gallery (London). Public domain.

Thomas Paine, the author of this remarkable document, had spent most of his life in England. Yet since having crossed the Atlantic two years earlier, he had embraced the American cause wholeheartedly and had shaped in prose the thoughts and aspirations of many ordinary citizens. His words electrified the colonies. George Washington, who was struggling to shape diverse militia units into a new Continental Army, praised “the sound doctrine and unanswerable reasoning contained in the pamphlet Common Sense.” He hoped the argument would push the timid delegates in Congress to declare the colonies independent.

It did. The essay was circulated as a pamphlet and copied in the newspapers of every city. It was discussed over farm fences, debated in taprooms, and argued about in colonial legislatures. Barely five months later, Congress took the momentous step of declaring the colonies independent. A government of our own is our natural right, Paine had written. On July 4, 1776, the delegates asserted that American colonies were now “Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown.”

The reaction of the British government was to attempt to bring the colonies back into the empire by force. The king ordered two armies to descend on America. Ten thousand professional fighters would occupy Canada and invade the rebellious territory from the north. Forty thousand more would sail directly to New York. The troops would include thousands of hired soldiers from Britain’s allies among the German principalities.

Now the war had taken on a new meaning. Now it was no longer a dispute over taxation or representation or the duty owed to a monarch. If Americans won their freedom, it would mark a new epoch in the world. And now New York was at the war’s epicenter.

Part One

September 15–September 16, 1776

Chapter 1

By September 1776, Thomas Paine had done more than any other individual to convince Americans to break their ties with England and to declare themselves independent. He well understood that dispensing with the centuries-long tradition of monarchical rule was a dangerous and daunting endeavor. But even he did not fully grasp the sacrifice that would be required or the depth of the crisis that now loomed over his adopted homeland.

One who had heeded his words was a young Connecticut lad named Joseph Martin. He may have read Paine’s delicious phrases in a pamphlet, or he may have heard them repeated in the town square. We have it in our power to begin the world over again. Yes! It was the shining hope of the young. Remake the world. The words had stirred Martin, sounding a chord in his heart like an organ in church.

So, on a hot July 6 in the year 1776, four months shy of turning sixteen, Joseph had said to a young friend, “If you enlist I will.” To himself he whispered, “I may as well go through with the business now as not.” Independence in the air, he went through with it. He signed up for six months to “try out sogerin’.” He had become a musketman with Peck’s Third Company of Douglas’s Fifth Battalion of Wadsworth’s brigade of Connecticut new levy militia. He had joined a revolution.

When he had first put on the uniform, Martin had felt his soul expanding. He sensed his frail body growing larger, tougher. As he marched in step with his fellow soldiers, he gloried in a greater sense of life. He and the men of his regiment were a muscular creature, more powerful, more forceful, far grander than any individual man. He was part of an army.

New York City and surrounding area map from Tom Paine's War.
A map of New York City and its surrounding area from Tom Paine’s War.

His regiment had ridden a sloop down Long Island Sound through Hell Gate and along the dirty river to the wharf at New York City. At the time, the entire city extended barely more than a mile north of its southern tip at the Battery. Martin and his fellows had paraded proudly on Broad Street. They had joined the mass of armed men commanded by George Washington, men who would fend off the onslaught of the king’s forces.

***

That was then. Now, in mid-September, the sluggish Sunday morning found Martin and his regiment stretched out along Kip’s Bay, a cove two and a half miles north of New York City.

Now he lay in a ditch behind heaped dirt along the bank of the East River. He had been on duty all night, his eyes peering into blackness till they ached. He had watched the starlight flash on the black water. Now the heavy air and an empty fatigue pressed against him. The smell made him think of a freshly dug grave. He wiped his mouth with his sleeve, swatted at the age-old insects pestering his face.

He allowed a deep pity for himself to suffuse his breast. He was hungry and morning had brought no food. The predictable rhythms of his childhood had gone awry. He had to go where he was ordered, but he sensed that the officers did not know what they were doing. They were pulling strings to make him jerk this way and that.

The unseasonable heat made it hard to concentrate. At dawn, four British warships had heaved into sight. They stopped directly opposite the American troops. Their clanking anchors dropped with mighty splashes. The chains rattled out. The rising sun became tangled in their rigging.

Martin and his fellows stared at these looming vessels. They were close enough to let the recruits exchange banter with the tars, who were busy attaching spring lines to the cables so that they could revolve the ships with capstans and point their gaping cannon at the shore. Close enough for the Americans to read Phoenix on the stern of the largest. Blessed Jesus, forty-four guns on two decks run out for action.

Tom Paine’s War copyright © 2026 by Jack Kelly. All rights reserved.


Author Jack Kelly
Photo credit: Jeff Brouws

JACK KELLY is an award-winning author and historian. His books include Band of Giants, which received the DAR History Medal, and God Save Benedict Arnold, a Finalist for the New England Book Awards. He has published five novels, and is a New York Foundation for the Arts fellow in Nonfiction Literature. Kelly has appeared on The History Channel, National Public Radio, and C-Span. He lives in New York’s Hudson Valley.

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Three New History Books to Read This January https://www.thehistoryreader.com/us-history/new-books-to-read-january-2026/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-books-to-read-january-2026 Thu, 01 Jan 2026 12:56:07 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=11049 With a new year comes a new set of history books publishing this month. Whether you’ve decided to read 12 history books this year or make a stretch goal of reading 40 of them, we’ve got you covered. Below are three new history books we’re excited to see this January from Jack Kelly, Susan Wise Read More »

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January 2026 Upcoming History Books

With a new year comes a new set of history books publishing this month. Whether you’ve decided to read 12 history books this year or make a stretch goal of reading 40 of them, we’ve got you covered. Below are three new history books we’re excited to see this January from Jack Kelly, Susan Wise Bauer, and Jane Ziegelman.


Tom Paine's War by Jack Kelly

Two hundred and fifty years ago, the Declaration of Independence marked the birth of the United States. But two essays of that era appealed even more directly to Americans’ feelings. In January 1776, Thomas Paine—a recent immigrant to America —published Common Sense. His straightforward argument upended the fraud of monarch. His words convinced Americans that the king had no divine right to rule them—they could rule themselves. He turned a rebellion over taxes and representation into a true Revolution.

Tom Paine’s War by Jack Kelly is a riveting exploration of our nation’s birth, showing how one man’s words—and the determination of American patriots—allowed our nation to survive its first crisis.

Amazon  |  Barnes & Noble  |  Bookshop

The Great Shadow by Susan Wise Bauer

Anti-science, anti-vaccine, anti-reason beliefs seem to be triumphing over common sense today. How did we get here? The Great Shadow brings a huge missing piece to this puzzle—the experience of actually being ill. What did it feel like to be a woman or man struggling with illness in ancient times, in the Middle Ages, in the seventeenth century, or in 1920? And how did that shape our thoughts and convictions?

The Great Shadow uses extensive historical research and first-person accounts to tell a vivid story about sickness and our responses to it, from very ancient times until the last decade.

Amazon  |  Barnes & Noble  |  Bookshop

Once There Was a Town by Jane Ziegelman

By the close of World War II, six million Jews had been erased from the face of the earth. Those who eluded death had lost their homes, families, and entire way of life. Their response was quintessentially Jewish. From a people with a long-history of self-narration, survivors gathered in groups and wrote books, yizkor books, remembering all that had been destroyed. Jane Ziegelman’s Once There Was a Town takes readers on a journey through this largely uncharted body of writing and the vanished world it depicts.

Amazon  |  Barnes & Noble  |  Bookshop

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Featured Excerpt: JFK: Public, Private, Secret https://www.thehistoryreader.com/us-history/featured-excerpt-jfk-public-private-secret/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=featured-excerpt-jfk-public-private-secret Fri, 12 Dec 2025 12:14:22 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=11022 by J. Randy Taraborrelli J. Randy Taraborrelli shares with The History Reader an excerpt from his instant New York Times bestselling book, JFK: Public, Private, Secret. Read on to discover how Jackie’s parents and John’s parents felt about their budding relationship as well as early details on how John’s family supported his early political career. Read More »

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by J. Randy Taraborrelli

J. Randy Taraborrelli shares with The History Reader an excerpt from his instant New York Times bestselling book, JFK: Public, Private, Secret. Read on to discover how Jackie’s parents and John’s parents felt about their budding relationship as well as early details on how John’s family supported his early political career.


Jackie Bouvier and John F. Kennedy married in Newport, Rhode Island, on September 12, 1953.
Jackie Bouvier and John F. Kennedy married in Newport, Rhode Island, on September 12, 1953. Public domain. Courtesy of Wikimedia.

“The secret to happily-ever-after,” Janet Auchincloss had been preaching to Jackie and Lee ever since they were little girls, “is money and power.” She always believed she was entitled to affluence and security. Rose Kennedy felt the same way. Many women of that time, in fact, felt similarly even if, like Rose, they didn’t come right out and say it. While they dated and married with money and power in mind, to verbalize it would’ve been considered gauche, and certainly to explicitly pass it on to your daughters as a mandate, vulgar. They should learn by example, as Rose’s daughters did. With the exception of Rosie, all of them would marry men who had the potential to make a lot of money and be very powerful. The Kennedy girls would go into their marriages with their own wealth, unlike Jackie and Lee, who had no money of their own. Jack Kennedy met both of Janet’s standards, money and power. Her daughter could do a lot worse, and with John Husted, she would have. Therefore, JFK had Mummy’s approval, though she did have some reservations.

Janet knew her former husband, Jack Bouvier, and her father, Jim Lee, had strong feelings about Jack’s father, Joe. Jackie’s cousin John Davis explained: “In 1945, Jackie’s grandfather, Jim Lee, confided in Joe that he was about to invest in the Merchandise Mart in Chicago. That was prime real estate. Joe acted quickly and bought it for himself, thereby double- crossing Jim. Earlier, when Joe was chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, his crackdown on the way certain stocks could be traded had decimated Jack Bouvier’s portfolio. ‘My father and ex-husband hate Jack’s father,’ Janet told Mrs. [Martha] Bartlett. ‘So?’ Mrs. Bartlett countered. ‘What’s that got to do with Jackie?’ Janet couldn’t disagree with that, I guess.”

Joe Kennedy had been impressed with Jackie when he first met her in Palm Beach in December 1951. Once he realized she might be a factor in their lives, he took it upon himself to look into her background. “He’d heard she was an heiress, but when he checked it out, he found it wasn’t true,” said his nephew Joey Gargan. “He also assumed she was mostly French, given her surname. In fact, he learned she was only about one-eighth French, no matter what her mother, who was mostly Irish, might claim. She had also said the Bouviers were descended from French aristocracy, which also wasn’t true.”

Joe Kennedy’s secretary, Janet DesRosiers, recalled, “Joe used to say, ‘It doesn’t matter who you are. It matters who people think you are.’ That was politics, after all. He decided to keep an eye on Jackie while also giving Jack the freedom to pursue her. After all, she was, by any measure, the perfect political wife on paper. We all saw that. She looked good on Jack’s arm. That mattered.”

At this same time, Jackie was given a promotion at the Times-Herald. Her “Inquiring Photographer” column would be known as the “Inquiring Camera Girl” and would carry her byline. While she was determined to continue working, she felt there was no reason she couldn’t also date Jack. However, their budding romance would be complicated by his workload as he traveled about and laid the groundwork for his Senate campaign. “It was a very spasmodic courtship,” she later said, “conducted mainly at long distance with a great clanking of coins in dozens of phone booths.”

On April 6, after assembling a crackerjack team to help him get to the finish line, Jack officially announced his Senate run. His team included Dave Powers from Boston, a loyal friend who’d been in charge of his congressional campaign. There was also Larry O’Brien, an experienced politico from Springfield, and Kenny O’Donnell, Bobby’s old college roommate, a fellow Irishman who had served in the Army Air Corps.

A big part of Kenny O’Donnell’s job would be taming Jack’s father, who was financing the whole operation but who everyone agreed had a damaged reputation and weak political instincts. Joe could be a bully, unreasonable, contentious, and prone to spreading conspiracy theories. On the plus side, he was a great media strategist, knew how to plant just the right stories at just the right times, and was able to secure the important endorsement of top newspapers, even if he had to pay for them. In a couple months’ time, he’d write a check for half a million dollars to get the support of the conservative Boston Post. Jack would say his father had to “buy the newspaper” to get such great backing. Joe had plenty of money and would spend as much as he needed to in order to see his son win. “Kennedys must win” was his philosophy, always. There had to be a way around him, however, in building the kind of statewide campaign necessary for Jack to win. Kenny had the smarts to figure it out, and a big part of how he did that was to pass the buck on to someone who had real influence over the patriarch: his son Bobby.

Twenty-six-year-old RFK knew that to control his father he needed to act as if he was seeking his approval when, actually, he was strategizing ways around it. Jack too often vehemently disagreed with their father, which always caused havoc, and Teddy, of course, was too young to be a factor. Bobby had turned pacifying the old man into a fine art; he’d been doing it all his life. When his two older brothers were off finding themselves, he was home sparring with Joe. Now, he would be used to tame him. Bobby would end up being a titanic force on Jack’s team, from this point forward . . . and all the way to the White House.

JFK: Public, Private, Secret © 2025 by J. Randy Taraborrelli. All rights reserved.


Photo credit: Ashton Bingham

J. RANDY TARABORRELLI is the acclaimed author of numerous New York Times bestsellers about the Kennedys, including Jackie, Ethel, Joan: Women of Camelot, adapted as a miniseries by NBC, and The Kennedys – After Camelot, adapted for television by Reelz. His other bestselling works include The Kennedy Heirs and Jackie, Janet & Lee. His most recent book, Jackie: Public, Private, Secret, debuted at No. 3 on the New York Times bestseller list. Taraborrelli is currently adapting both Jackie: Public, Private, Secret and JFK: Public, Private, Secret for television.

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Featured Excerpt: Gemini https://www.thehistoryreader.com/us-history/featured-excerpt-gemini/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=featured-excerpt-gemini Fri, 05 Dec 2025 19:56:12 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=11032 by Jeffrey Kluger Named by Time Magazine as one of the most anticipated books of fall 2025, Gemini by Jeffrey Kluger reveals the thrilling, untold story of the pioneering Gemini program that was instrumental in getting Americans on the moon. Read on for a featured, introductory excerpt! Like every man who had ever orbited the Read More »

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by Jeffrey Kluger

Named by Time Magazine as one of the most anticipated books of fall 2025, Gemini by Jeffrey Kluger reveals the thrilling, untold story of the pioneering Gemini program that was instrumental in getting Americans on the moon. Read on for a featured, introductory excerpt!


Like every man who had ever orbited the earth before them, Jim Lovell and Buzz Aldrin knew their lives depended on their retrorockets. The very purpose of the rockets was in the retro part of their name—to accelerate their spacecraft not forward but, in effect, backward, slowing the ship down and bleeding off speed, which was essential if Lovell and Aldrin were going to live another day after the ninety-four hours they’d already spent in space.

Orbiting the earth, after all, is effectively an act of falling around the earth—flying high enough and fast enough that even as your spacecraft speeds forward and downward, the surface of the planet curves away from you, meaning that while you fall and fall and fall and fall, you never, ever reach the ground. Like the moon, you become a stable satellite of the earth, staying aloft long after your water and air and power give out. So while Lovell and Aldrin had happily gone to space aboard their Gemini 12 spacecraft—the last of the Gemini program’s ten manned missions—they very much looked forward to turning their ship rump forward, firing their four retro-rocket motors, and subtracting enough speed from their 17,500-mile-per-hour velocity that gravity would have its way with them and they would begin a controlled plunge through the atmosphere.

On the afternoon of November 15, 1966, the men began the homecoming maneuver, facing their ship backward and bracing for the lifesaving engine burn.

“We are now one minute and eighteen seconds to retrofire,” announced Paul Haney, the voice of NASA, to the millions of Americans following the maneuver on live television. Eighteen seconds later, he added, “One minute on my mark. Mark!” Then, “Thirty seconds, mark!”

And finally, “Ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, one, retrofire!”

In the spacecraft, Lovell and Aldrin felt four hard bumps and heard four loud bangs as the engines lit, slamming them with more than ten thousand pounds of thrust squarely in their backs.

“Retrofire!” Lovell, the commander, echoed.

“Holding it steady,” Aldrin answered.

The engines fired for just five seconds, but the physics and the arithmetic governing the maneuver meant that that was enough to send the astronauts on a controlled high dive through the steadily thickening air, which would cause temperatures of 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit to bloom across the heat shield at the bottom of their capsule. Less than half an hour later, they splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean, seven hundred miles southeast of Cape Kennedy in Florida, within sight of the prime rescue vessel, the USS Wasp.

“Son of a gun!” Aldrin exclaimed as the spacecraft slammed into the choppy Atlantic waters.

“Boy! Boy! Boy!” Lovell responded.

“Gemini 12, Houston,” called astronaut Pete Conrad, the capsule communicator in mission control, as TV cameras picked up the sight of the spacecraft. “Smile! You’re on the tube!”

Astronaut James Lovell is photographed inside his Gemini spacecraft during the Gemini-12 mission
Astronaut Jim Lovell is photographed inside his Gemini spacecraft during the Gemini-12 mission. Public domain. Courtesy of Wikimedia.

For the historical record, Lovell did smile and Aldrin did smile and America smiled too. Because with the successful splashdown of Gemini 12, the twenty-month Gemini program, which had seen the US launching men into space at the rate of one mission every eight weeks, during a stretch in which the much-feared Soviet Union had not succeeded in sending any cosmonauts aloft at all, had come to its triumphant end. In that twenty months, NASA and America had learned how to walk in space, to fly long-duration missions in space, to navigate in space, to rendezvous and dock with another vehicle in space—in short, to do every little thing it would be necessary to do if the US were going to meet the pledge the martyred president John Kennedy had made more than five years before: to have American boots on the moon before the end of the decade.

The gripping and glittery tale of the Gemini program—one defined by its successes, yes, but also by its tragedies and losses and deaths and near deaths—has never been fully told before. Americans know well the story of the Mercury program, when such Mount Rushmore names as John Glenn and Al Shepard and Gus Grissom and Wally Schirra made the nation’s first journeys in space. And the nation surely knows of the Apollo program, when human beings first ventured moonward.

But we know less about the story of the Gemini program—which gave us the likes of Lovell and Aldrin and Conrad and Neil Armstrong. That is not as it should be.

Over the arc of the last three generations, the adeptness of Gemini, the capabilities of Gemini, the mechanical genius of Gemini, not to mention the sublime skills of the men who piloted the Geminis, have had an outsize and often unappreciated impact on geopolitics, technology, and the fundamental science of space travel itself. It was the Gemini, certainly, that gave the US the cosmic edge over the Soviet Union in the original space race, contributing to a cascading series of economic, engineering, and political victories that helped bring the original Cold War to a peaceful end, with the West ascendant and the former Soviet Union consigned to history. 

It was the Gemini program that provided the glimmers of good—indeed, often dazzling—news during some of the darkest periods in America, in the midst of the bloody and riven 1960s, bringing not just the public but politicians together in the shared goal of making America the dominant power off the planet.

It was the Gemini program, too, that helped give rise to the global cooperation in space that exists today with NASA, the European Space Agency, the Canadian Space Agency, and more than fifteen nations collaborating not just aboard the International Space Station but in the new Artemis program, which aims to have boots back on the moon by the end of the 2020s. Every docking a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft makes with the space station, every space walk any astronaut from any nation takes, every step an Apollo astronaut took on the lunar surface, every one of the 135 space shuttle missions, every scientific experiment conducted aboard any active spacecraft flows directly and indirectly from lessons learned more than half a century ago when the very first Geminis with their very first astronauts made their very first flights into the void.

America and the world have overlooked Gemini too long, have forgotten its achievements too easily, have wrongly assigned it to the spot of forgotten middle sibling in the Mercury-Gemini-Apollo troika. But Gemini was one of the most thrilling and harrowing and uplifting exercises ever attempted in the history of space travel. I and others have told the story of the Mercury program. I and others have told the story of the Apollo program. With this book, I aim to tell an equally powerful story of the Gemini program and, in doing so, help complete the historical record.

PROLOGUE

Space Walk at the Brink: June 5, 1966

The last thing Tom Stafford wanted to do was cut Gene Cernan loose in space. Stafford liked Cernan; he had trained hard with Cernan. For more than a year, the two of them had worked together to get ready for their three-day flight of Gemini 9, and now, in early June 1966, they were actually aloft. But the business of cutting Cernan loose was all at once a very real possibility.

Stafford, the commander of the mission, was inside the spacecraft, buckled into his left-hand seat. Cernan, the junior pilot, was outside, dangling—actually spinning, tumbling, and flailing—at the end of a long umbilical cord, completely unable to control his movements, much less make his way back to the small open hatch on his side of the spacecraft and maneuver himself inside.

It was Deke Slayton, the head of the astronaut office, who first raised the possibility of what Stafford should do in a situation like this—and for Gemini 9, the warning seemed especially important, since the flight had been snakebit from the start. Just four months earlier, two good men—rookie astronauts both—had died a fiery death trying to get the mission off the ground. The next month, two other good men—Neil Armstrong and Dave Scott—had nearly lost their lives when their Gemini 8 spacecraft spun out of control 186 miles above the earth’s surface. Now it was Gemini 9’s turn, and NASA’s run of bad luck seemed to be continuing.

The Gemini 9 crew member Eugene A. Cernan.
The Gemini 9 crew member Eugene A. Cernan. Public domain. Courtesy of Wikimedia.

Twice, at the end of May, Stafford and Cernan had suited up and climbed into their spacecraft in preparation for liftoff, and both times, technical problems had caused the launch attempt to be scrubbed. It was before the second of those attempts, when Stafford and Cernan were still in their long johns, preparing to climb into their pressure suits, that Slayton appeared in the suit-up room. Completely ignoring Cernan—not even making eye contact with the rookie astronaut—he addressed Stafford.

“Tom,” he said, “I need to have a few words with you in private.”

Cernan looked at Stafford with a questioning expression, and Stafford merely shrugged in response. That hardly appeased Cernan. Yes, he was a first-timer in space, while Stafford had flown just six months before on the successful flight of Gemini 6. But the two men were now one crew, and anything that was said to the commander ought to be said to the pilot as well. That wasn’t what Slayton wanted, however. He escorted Stafford out of the room and in quiet tones laid down what was NASA’s life-and-death law.

Only once before, on the flight of Gemini 4 just a year earlier, had an American astronaut walked in space, and that had been merely a twenty-minute float outside the cabin door, with pilot Ed White slightly maneuvering himself this way and that with a handheld zip gun before hurrying back inside and sealing the hatch. Cernan’s space walk would be much more ambitious, lasting hours, with the astronaut climbing all over the spacecraft to deposit and collect experiment packages before making his way to the rear end of the ship where an astronaut maneuvering unit—an air force–built jet pack known as the AMU for short—was stowed. Cernan would be expected to climb into the backpack and fly free in space, connected to the ship only by a long, thin, nylon tether.

The entire exercise posed enormous risks, and Slayton was well aware of the mortal math involved in that.

Up to now, NASA had launched twelve crews of men into space—six aboard the one-man Mercury spacecraft, and six more so far on the first six Gemini flights, from Gemini 3 to Gemini 8—and all twelve of those crews had come home safely. NASA wanted to keep those numbers as close to perfect as possible. Sending two men into space aboard Gemini 9 and bringing two men home was the objective, of course. But if something happened to Cernan when he was free-floating outside—if he became incapacitated, unconscious, or was otherwise beyond rescue—Slayton would not stand for Stafford playing the hero, remaining in space with the cabin door open and dying along with his crewmate. In such a situation, Stafford was to disconnect the umbilical cord that linked his junior astronaut to the spacecraft, seal the hatch, and come home alone, leaving Cernan, a thirty-two-year-old naval aviator, to become nothing more than a lifeless satellite of the earth.

Cut him loose, Slayton said to Stafford. If it comes to that, cut him loose.

Stafford nodded his understanding, left Slayton, and returned to the suit-up room.

“What was that all about?” Cernan asked.

“Everything’s fine, Geno,” Stafford answered. “No big deal.”

But now, one week later, with the third attempt of the Gemini 9 launch having at last succeeded and the crew in orbit 194 miles above the earth, it was a very big deal indeed—with Cernan in very big trouble.

Certainly, Gene Cernan was accustomed to taking chances—especially when he was a younger man, living the hot-rod aviator life that every rookie naval pilot lived. Nine years earlier, in 1957, he was practicing bombing runs at Naval Air Station Miramar in San Diego, California. The drill called for him to buckle into the cockpit of his FJ-4B Fury with a dummy warhead strapped to the bottom of the jet.

His target was a 40-foot space on the ground, barely wider than the Fury’s 39.1-foot wingspan, marked on either side by 10-foot wooden poles driven into the earth. The goal: Approach the target at 300 knots—or 354 miles per hour—drop the simulated bomb near the ground, and then haul ass up and away at 500 knots—or 575 miles per hour—escaping the imaginary blast the dummy explosive would have unleashed if it had been real.

Cernan had flown the maneuver countless times, always successfully, but on one especially exuberant day, he decided to take his chances—flying faster and lower and more hotdoggedly than he ever had before.

His reasoning was simple: In a real shooting war, the faster and lower he flew, the less chance the Soviet enemy would have of spotting him on radar. So Cernan took off, and Cernan flew low and Cernan flew fast—so low and so fast that when he approached that 40-foot space, his 39.1-foot-wide airplane clipped one of the wooden poles, shaking and jolting the plane and emitting a loud cracking sound. The plane still flew, and Cernan managed to land it safely, but the moment he did, the ground crew rushed out to meet him. One of the plane’s gun turrets was filled with a solid cylinder of wood that had been jammed into it from the post. Worse, the plane had been torn open along its starboard side, with a long gash running from the nose all the way down to the wing. A little more ripping, a little more tearing, a little more violence from the hot dog flying, and Cernan would not have made it home at all that day. Later, he and his squadron mates joked about it over beers, but it was a shaken Cernan who drank and laughed that night. It was the last time the young flier would ever depart from flight rules and strict training protocols.

In preparing for his space walk, Cernan maintained that playit-straight attitude, spending scores of hours training in NASA’s weightlessness-simulating jet—a KC-135 cargo plane nicknamed the “vomit comet” because it would take trainee astronauts on flights that amounted to a long series of roller-coaster-like parabolic loops, with twenty seconds or so of zero-g occurring at the top of each parabola.

The drill involved practicing a spacewalking task in the twenty seconds of weightlessness you got, waiting out the next minute of full gravity as the plane dove to the bottom of its trajectory and climbed back up, then continuing your zero-g rehearsals in the next twenty seconds of over-the-top free float. It was a slow and painstaking way to learn to maneuver in weightlessness—and plenty of men did not make it through the day without the vomit part of the vomit comet name having its way with them. Cernan, once an aviator who liked taking risks, would be nowhere near as cavalier in practicing for what was only America’s second space walk—and its first truly ambitious one.

On Sunday, June 5, 1966, at 5:30 a.m. Houston time, two days after launch, Cernan began his space walk, or what NASA preferred to call, in the agency’s arid argot, his extravehicular activity—or EVA. The precise timing of the EVA was in some respects arbitrary, since there actually was no morning or night in spaceflight; the astronauts circled the planet every ninety minutes, experiencing sixteen sunrises and sixteen sunsets per day. So to keep things tidy, they set their watches by the time it was in Houston, where mission control was located. If it was 5:30 a.m. in southeast Texas, it was 5:30 a.m. aboard Gemini 9.

Cernan would need a long time to prepare for his EVA. The ground crew equipped him with an eleven-page checklist that covered everything from donning a chest pack, which would provide him with oxygen, power, and communications; to unstowing the twenty-five-foot umbilical cord that would keep him safely attached to the Gemini spacecraft; to pressurizing the modified EVA space suits both he and Stafford were wearing. Gemini astronauts who were flying missions in which no EVA was taking place could afford to wear lighter suits, since the cabin itself was pressurized, surrounding them with artificial atmosphere. But once the hatch was opened and Cernan exited, both men would be exposed to the hard vacuum of space, and that required more robust suits—seven layers thick.

Even before pressurizing his suit, Cernan found the umbilical cord almost impossible to manage in the weightless environment of the spacecraft. The infernal thing floated and twisted and tangled itself, resisting all of Cernan’s efforts to keep it rolled and controlled.

“Canary,” Stafford radioed down to the Canary Island tracking station, “you can inform Houston we’ve got the big snake out of the black box.”

Once Cernan and Stafford inflated their suits, things became even more difficult, involving both the challenge of maneuvering the snake and the simple matter of moving at all. As the suits were inflated to a pressure of 3.5 pounds per square inch, they hardened and stiffened, making maneuvering in them almost impossible. It took all of an astronaut’s strength merely to bend an elbow or flex a knee. For Stafford, this would present little problem, as he would remain seated inside the spacecraft throughout the EVA. For Cernan, who was supposed to maneuver balletically around the Gemini 9 spacecraft, it would be a different matter entirely.

Stafford depressurized the cockpit, matching the vacuum inside to the vacuum outside so that the hatch would not blow open and fly free from interior air pressure when it was unlatched. Then Cernan reached up to the hatch’s handle and tried to open it, but it wouldn’t budge.

“Man, the hatch is stiff,” he informed both Stafford and the ground.

Using both hands, and already struggling against the bulk and unmaneuverability of the suit, he managed to push the handle inch by inch—millimeter by millimeter, it seemed—until at last the hatch opened and the trace amount of air that remained inside the spacecraft breathed itself out and away. Before Cernan even exited the ship, he and Stafford had to deal with the routine business of throwing out a bag of trash—mostly empty food wrappers—that they’d accumulated during the two days they’d spent in space so far. Stafford passed the bag to Cernan, who heaved it weightlessly outside the open hatch.

“Okay, we’ve gotten rid of the garbage,” Stafford told the ground.

Now Cernan tentatively raised himself up, placed his feet on his seat, and stood in the open hatch. He gaped at what he saw. The twin windows in the Gemini spacecraft measured only six inches by eight inches, affording the astronauts enough of a view to conduct some narrow photo reconnaissance of Earth and maneuver their spacecraft throughout their orbits. But that peephole field of vision was nothing compared to what Cernan now had. Gemini 9 was flying over Baja California, and Cernan could see the blue of the water against the green-brown spit of land and the rusty red surface of the desert southwest stretching in all directions.

“Hallelujah!” Cernan exclaimed. “Boy, is it beautiful out here, Tom.”

“It sure looks pretty,” Stafford said, taking in the minimal view his little window afforded him.

“I’ll grab my Hasselblad and take a picture of that,” Cernan said, photographing the scene with the camera attached to the front of his suit.

Cernan’s first jobs, before he even emerged fully from the spacecraft, were to attach a movie camera on an external mount to film the EVA and install a mirror to the exterior of the ship so that Stafford could see him as he maneuvered around the spacecraft and retrieved a micrometeorite experiment that had been attached to the Gemini to measure the impact of microscopic space dust.

That job done, Cernan emerged fully from the spacecraft and prepared to make his way along its flank to its aft end, where the AMU was stowed and waiting for him. The journey along the Gemini, which measured only eighteen feet and five inches from bow to stern, proved to be well-nigh impossible. NASA and Cernan may have had their own ideas about how to maneuver at the end of a twenty-five-foot umbilical cord—and Cernan’s training in the vomit comet might have left him thinking he knew what he was doing—but Isaac Newton had his ideas too, and those prevailed. Every physical action Cernan took produced an equal and opposite reaction in the snake; if Cernan moved out, the snake pulled him in; if Cernan moved left, the snake flung him right.

The out-of-control motion radiated down to the spacecraft itself, which began yawing and pitching in response to the force. Such unwanted motion would have normally called for Stafford to fire his thrusters and stabilize the ship, but he dared not do that with Cernan outside, where the thruster exhaust could burn through his suit.

Instead, it was up to Cernan to stabilize himself. He grabbed for Velcro patches NASA had attached to the exterior of the spacecraft to help him gain his purchase, but the whipsawing of the umbilical cord proved more powerful than the hold the Velcro could provide. He also reached for handholds that had been installed on the exterior of the ship, but they had been placed multiple feet apart—the thinking being that Cernan would have an easy glide alongside the spacecraft and the handholds would be necessary only in an emergency. Instead, he continued flopping around at the end of the umbilical cord, utterly helpless to control his own motions. “You’re kind of rocking the boat,” Stafford radioed to Cernan from within the jerking Gemini. He then glanced at the mirror Cernan had installed and was alarmed at what he saw. “Looks like you’re upside down and have all sorts of snake around you,” Stafford said.

“I can’t get where I want to go,” Cernan answered. “The snake is all over me. It’s pretty much a bear to get at these things because the handrails are so far back.”

Finally, through a combination of extreme exertion, Newtonian dynamics, and no small amount of sheer dumb luck, Cernan managed to swing in the direction of the spacecraft, slam into its flank, and grab hold of one of the handrails. Now, at last, he got some additional help.

Toward the back end of the craft, NASA had attached a long cable running the rest of the way to the end of the craft that Cernan could grab on to, hand over hand. That, too, was exhausting work, as he could move only a few inches at a time before stopping and gathering in the snake to prevent it from yanking him away from his tenuous hold on the cable.

Cernan had been outside for more than an hour now, enough to move from the daytime side of Earth, where the temperature on him and the spacecraft was a blistering 270 degrees Fahrenheit, to the nighttime side, where it was a frigid -270 degrees Fahrenheit, and back to the sunlit side. His space suit was designed to keep the heat and cold within a survivable range, but all it took was a few degrees above or below that limit to cause him to feel a sweltering heat or a chilling cold. Sweat now began to pour down his face and sting his eyes—though he was helpless to wipe them since he was sealed inside his suit and helmet. Worse, his visor began to fog up from the dampness of the sweat, obscuring his vision.

On the ground, at a console in Houston, flight surgeon Charles Berry read Cernan’s heart rate at 155 beats per minute, or about what it would be if he were running up 120 stairs each minute.

Tom Stafford inside Gemini IX spacecraft. Public Domain. Courtesy of Wikimedia.
Tom Stafford inside Gemini IX spacecraft. Public Domain. Courtesy of Wikimedia.

“How are you doing now, Gene?” Stafford asked.

“Okay,” Cernan answered. “I’m going to slow down and take a rest.”

Cernan allowed himself to catch his breath and, he hoped, slow his heart, and then inch by inch, his visor running with condensed moisture, made his way semi-blindly to the back end of the spacecraft, where the AMU, which the air force engineers still expected him to don and fly, waited for him. But when he reached the aft of the ship, he encountered a nasty—and potentially deadly—surprise. That end of the spacecraft had been the part that was attached to the Titan II rocket that had blasted the crew into space; when the rocket separated just before the Gemini capsule reached orbit, it left a sawtooth, razor-sharp spear of metal behind, an obstacle Cernan would have to climb around without slicing open his suit and suffering an instant and fatal depressurization.

He reported the problem to Stafford and then, ever so carefully, negotiated that knife edge. When he had gotten past it, he tumbled gratefully into a recessed area at the back of the ship, where, with all his exertion, he fought his rigid suit and bent it into a position that would allow him to sit. He looked to his right, where the AMU was stowed— and he sighed at what lay ahead.

Flying the AMU meant more than just donning the backpack, firing it up, and taking off. Attached to the unit was a thirty-five-item checklist, each step of which had to be completed, in sequence, for the thing to fly. The first chore was to switch on the lights attached to the unit so that he could read the checklist. He threw the proper switch and only one of the little lamps worked. Squinting through the dim illumination and his sweat-covered visor, he did his best to follow the checklist, but the work of strapping into the contraption and configuring its controls was exhausting, and Cernan began to pant. On Berry’s screen in Houston, the astronaut’s heart rate now read 180 beats per minute.

Next, according to plan, Cernan disconnected from the umbilical cord that attached him to the ship and clipped on instead to one that was connected to the AMU. Immediately, to the flight surgeon’s alarm, the signal from the astronaut to the ground flickered out. Cernan’s heart could accelerate to the level of cardiac arrest and the Houston doctor would never know it. And his heart was accelerating indeed as the unfiltered sun poured over him and the recessed metal skillet that was the rear of the spacecraft.

“We’re really cooking back here,” Cernan gasped.

From Stafford’s window, he could see that Gemini 9 was approaching another sunset. “Okay, Gene,” he said. “Nighttime coming your way shortly.”

But nighttime, Cernan suspected, would only present another problem, and he was right. No sooner did the spacecraft move into the shadowed part of the earth and the temperature drop to -270 degrees than the sweat that covered his visor froze over, blinding him completely.

Cernan leaned forward, rubbed his nose against the inside of the visor, and opened a tiny hole in the ice. He could see the lights of Australia beneath him.

“How are you doing, Geno?” Stafford asked.

“Really fogged up here,” Cernan said, continuing to work as well as he could through the AMU checklist. The same poor connection to the AMU that was preventing data from Cernan’s biomedical sensors from reaching the ground also now disrupted the communications between the two astronauts.

“Can you see anything, Geno?” Stafford asked. “Can you understand me? Geno? Geno? Yes or no?”

Cernan responded, but whatever he was saying was unintelligible.

Stafford contemplated his and his pilot’s options. Another daytime was soon approaching, which would cook Cernan again, followed by another nighttime, which would freeze his visor solid once more. Cernan could not maneuver with the main umbilical cord, much less, Stafford guessed, with the untested AMU, and every additional minute he remained outside was another minute of mortal danger.

That, for Stafford, was it. He knew Cernan and, after training with him for more than a year, understood the man’s mettle. Cernan would keep working back there, with his vision gone, his heartbeat triphammering, a razor-like piece of metal threatening to tear his suit open wide, the light and shadow of the day and night tormenting him, all the while trying to fly the air force’s cursed AMU if it killed him—which it might.

As commander of the ship, Stafford had the authority to make any decision that concerned the conduct of his mission and the welfare of his crew, even if the flight controllers on the ground didn’t agree. The EVA, he decided, was over.

“Okay,” he said, partly to Cernan and partly to the ground. “No-go. The link is terrible. Did you understand? Geno? Do you hear me? I said no-go. We’re aborting.”

Cernan did hear him. He released a long breath—both with relief and with trepidation. Aborting the EVA was easy enough. Making his way blindly back around the jagged metal shard, moving along the side of the Gemini—finding the handholds and Velcro and the ship’s aft cable without the benefit of vision, all the while battling to keep his heart rate under control—was no small matter. Then, too, there was the matter of folding himself back inside the tiny seat of his little spacecraft and getting the hatch closed while wearing a space suit that kept him as rigid as a mannequin. Gene Cernan had left Gemini 9 to walk in space.

If his suit tore or he became incapacitated or he could not reenter the ship at all, there was no guarantee that walk would ever end.

“I don’t think I’ll make it that way,” Cernan said, flicking his unseeing eyes back around the rear end of the ship toward the front. But that way, as both astronauts knew, was the only way. The comment was all Cernan said that sounded like surrender—but it was enough.

Stafford heard the transmission clearly and nodded silently and somberly. Inside his head, Slayton’s words echoed hauntingly. Cut him loose.

Start listening to an audio excerpt of Gemini!


Gemini copyright © 2025 by Jeffrey Kluger. All rights reserved.


Jeffrey Kluger
Photo credit: Shaul Schwarz

Jeffrey Kluger is Editor at Large at Time, where he has written more than 45 cover stories. Coauthor of Lost Moon: The Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13, which was the basis for the movie Apollo 13, he is also the author of 13 other books including his latest book Gemini: Stepping Stone to the Moon, the Untold Story.

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2025 Holiday Gift Guide https://www.thehistoryreader.com/historical-figures/2025-holiday-gift-guide/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=2025-holiday-gift-guide Wed, 26 Nov 2025 16:26:22 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=11016 This December, we’re taking a look back at the many fascinating history books that published this year. From axe murderers to the history of rope, from the biography of Mt. Rushmore to a diverse array of WWII stories, the 2025 Holiday Gift Guide has a book recommendation for every history lover. Organized by general topic, Read More »

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The History Reader 2025 Holiday Gift Guide

This December, we’re taking a look back at the many fascinating history books that published this year. From axe murderers to the history of rope, from the biography of Mt. Rushmore to a diverse array of WWII stories, the 2025 Holiday Gift Guide has a book recommendation for every history lover. Organized by general topic, don’t blame us if you find yourself adding both gifts and books to keep to your shopping cart!


History of a Singular Subject

Two-time National Outdoor Book Award-winning author Buddy Levy’s thrilling narrative of polar exploration via airship―and the men who sacrificed everything, including their lives, for science, country, and polar immortality. Named one of Amazon’s Best History Books of 2025!

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

A brilliant and bloody examination of the axe’s foundational role in human history, from prehistoric violence, to war and executions, to newspaper headlines and popular culture.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

Threads of Empire by Dorothy Armstrong

Carpet specialist Dorothy Armstrong tells the stories surrounding twelve of the world’s most fascinating carpets.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

Rope by Tim Queeney

A unique and compelling adventure through the history of rope and its impact on civilization, in the vein of single-subject bestsellers like Salt and Cod.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

The Zorg by Siddharth Kara

From the Pulitzer finalist and New York Times bestselling author of Cobalt Red, The Zorg is the astonishing yet little-known true story of the most consequential slave ship that ever crossed the Atlantic. Named one of Amazon and Barnes & Noble’s Best History Books of 2025!

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

Gemini by Jeffrey Kluger

From the bestselling co-author of Apollo 13 comes the thrilling untold story of the pioneering Gemini program that was instrumental in getting Americans on the moon.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

A Biography of a Mountain by Matthew Davis

Just in time to celebrate the monument’s 100th anniversary, A Biography of a Mountain combines history with reportage, bringing the complicated and nuanced story of Mt. Rushmore to life.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

Progress: How One Idea Built Civilization and Now Threatens to Destroy It by Samuel Miller McDonald

For readers of Thomas Piketty, David Graeber, and Jared Diamond: A bold, provocative, wide-ranging argument about the human idea of progress that offers a new vision of our future.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

World War II History

Propaganda Girls by Lisa Rogak

The incredible untold story of four women who spun the web of deception that helped win World War II.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

Award-winning author Keith Lowe’s newest critical deep-dive into the history of Naples during WWII.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

The Last Secret Agent by Pippa Latour with Jude Dobson

After decades of silence, the last surviving World War II spy operating in the deadly world of Nazi France, reveals the real, untold story of her time as a secret agent.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

The Women's Orchestra of Auschwitz by Anne Sebba

From New York Times bestselling author of Les Parisiennes and That Woman: A Life of Wallis Simpson, this is a powerful and vivid portrait of the women who came together to form an orchestra in order to survive the horrors of Auschwitz.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

Running Deep: Bravery, Survival, and the True Story of the Deadliest Submarine in World War II

From New York Times bestselling author Tom Clavin comes the true story of the deadliest submarine in World War II and the courageous captain who survived torture and imprisonment at the hands of the enemy. Named one of Barnes & Noble’s Best History Books of 2025!

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

Historical Figures

A Matter of Complexion by Tess Chakkalakal

A New York Times Editor’s Choice, a biography of Charles Chesnutt, one of the first American authors to write for both Black and white readers.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

The Ride by Kostya Kennedy

Timed for the 250th anniversary of America’s revolution and founding: Paul Revere’s heroic ride, newly told with fresh research into little-known aspects of the story Americans have heard since childhood but hardly understood. A USA Today bestseller and one of Barnes & Noble’s Best History Books of 2025!

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

The Rebel Romanov by Helen Rappaport

From the New York Times bestselling author of The Romanov Sisters comes the story of a courageous young Imperial Grand Duchess who scandalized Europe in search of freedom.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

JFK: Public, Private, Secret by J. Randy Taraborrelli

From the New York Times bestselling Kennedy historian and author of Jackie: Public, Private, Secret comes the other side of the story—her husband’s: JFK: Public, Private, Secret. Named one of Amazon’s Best History books of 2025!

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

Milena and Margarete by Gwen Strauss

New from the beloved New York Times bestselling author of The Nine, a “narrative of unfathomable courage” (Wall Street Journal) about the two women who fell in love in the Ravensbrück concentration camp at the risk of their lives.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

Winning the Earthquake by Lorissa Rinehart

The first major biography of Jeannette Rankin, a groundbreaking suffragist, activist, and the first American woman to hold federal office.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

Military/Espionage History

A Rage to Conquer book by Michael Walsh

Award-winning author Michael Walsh looks at twelve momentous battles that changed the course of Western history.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

Peace Is a Shy Thing by Alex Vernon

The first literary biography of Tim O’Brien, the preeminent American writer of the war in Vietnam and one of the best writers of his generation, drawing on never-before-seen materials and original interviews.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

Every Weapon I Had by Paris Davis

The story of a Green Beret commander’s heroism during the Vietnam War, and the long fight to recognize his bravery.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

Project Mind Control by John Lisle

The inside story of the CIA’s secret mind control project, MKULTRA, using never-before-seen testimony from the perpetrators themselves.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 

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The Last Launch of the Gemini Program https://www.thehistoryreader.com/us-history/the-last-launch-of-the-gemini-program/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-last-launch-of-the-gemini-program Fri, 14 Nov 2025 18:23:11 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=10986 by Jeffrey Kluger On November 11, 1966, NASA launched Gemini 12, the last manned spaceflight in NASA’s Project Gemini, which stayed in space until its crew splashed into the Atlantic on November 15, 1966. Jeffrey Kluger, author of Apollo 13 and Gemini, takes a look back at the Gemini project, the last launch of Gemini 12, Read More »

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by Jeffrey Kluger

On November 11, 1966, NASA launched Gemini 12, the last manned spaceflight in NASA’s Project Gemini, which stayed in space until its crew splashed into the Atlantic on November 15, 1966. Jeffrey Kluger, author of Apollo 13 and Gemini, takes a look back at the Gemini project, the last launch of Gemini 12, and how the Gemini program prepared America to put men on the moon.


The demolition team at NASA’s Cape Kennedy in Florida was busy on the morning of November 11, 1966. 

Over the past year and a half, the space center teams had done yeoman’s work, helping to send up two-man crews in the nimble little Gemini spacecraft at the rate of one mission every 10 weeks. Gemini 4, launched in June 1965, was the first of those flights, and the crew—Jim McDivitt and Ed White—made history, with White exiting the capsule and maneuvering about at the end of a gold umbilical cord, performing America’s first walk in space. Gemini 5 was next, during which Gordon Cooper and Pete Conrad set a space endurance record, remaining in orbit for eight days. Next came Geminis 6 and 7, which saw the crews performing America’s first rendezvous, coming within a foot of each other as they tore around the Earth at 17,500 miles per hour—or 4.9 miles every second.

Gemini 12 prime crew: Astronauts James A. Lovell Jr. (right), command pilot, and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., pilot.
Gemini 12 prime crew: Astronauts James A. Lovell Jr. (right), command pilot, and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., pilot. Taken Sept. 8, 1966. Courtesy of Wikimedia. Public domain.

So it went until a Friday in November of 1966—59 years ago this week—when Jim Lovell and Buzz Aldrin climbed into the astronaut van and motored out to launch pad 19 for the liftoff of Gemini 12, the final mission in the 12-flight, 20-month, $1.35 billion Gemini project. A Gemini insignia flag was hoisted at the entrance to the space center to mark the occasion. When the astronauts walked from the van to the gantry elevator, a sign on Lovell’s back read “THE” and a sign on Aldrin’s read “END.” And so it was.

No sooner had the astronauts lifted off than the demolition crew went to work, converging on the launch site with welding guns and wrecking cranes and reducing the gantry to junk, clearing it for the construction of more elaborate launch facilities to come as the glorious days of Apollo dawned and the United States moved on to the moon. If the NASA brass were looking for a capstone mission for the Gemini program as a whole, they could not have done better than the one Lovell and Aldrin flew.

The two men would stay aloft for 94 hours, 34 minutes, and 19 seconds. Aldrin would perform five and a half hours of spacewalks—one of them fully outside the spacecraft and two standing up in his seat. He would also work on what the crew called a busy box—a set of tools and hardware that would help prove that astronauts could do useful work in zero-g. Included in the box was an electric screwdriver, a set of snippers and wires that Aldrin could experiment with, and a torque wrench that would allow him to turn a bolt by squeezing two handles, preventing a twist in one direction from turning his body in the opposite direction.

Lovell would dock and undock with an Agena target vehicle—an unmanned spacecraft with which Gemini crews practiced their rendezvous skills. He would rely on charts and a 59-pound onboard computer to calculate his approach. When the docking radar suddenly failed, Lovell would turn to the exquisite rendezvous computer that was Aldrin himself, who had earned a PhD from MIT in rendezvous mechanics. Lovell would also successfully steer his spacecraft, despite the fact that four of the orbital maneuvering thrusters quit working entirely or turned sluggish.

“Thrusters four and eight are dead completely,” he reported. “Two takes twelve seconds to build up and seven takes seventeen seconds. All the rest of them check out.”

The spacecraft would go fritzy in another way as well, with the fuel cells producing less-than-optimum power. But when it was time for Gemini 12 to come home, the ship would be the first of the Gemini series to reenter entirely automatically. Lovell and Aldrin would splash down a mere 3.4 miles from the aircraft carrier USS Wasp, catching a hard wave on the way into the water.

“Son of a gun!” Aldrin would exclaim.

“Boy, boy, boy!” Lovell would say. “That was a mean one, wasn’t it?”

It might have been a mean one, but it was a sweet one too. Over the course of the Gemini program, sixteen men had gone into space and sixteen had come home. It was lost on no one that the Soviet Union, which had long led the U.S. in the race to the moon, launched no men at all into orbit during the 603 days Gemini had been flying. The U.S. had not won the race. No one knew what ingenious hardware and exquisite missions the communist nation that had given the world Sputnik—the first satellite—and Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space, might be cooking up. More than three years remained until the end of the decade—the deadline which the late President Kennedy had set for the U.S. to achieve a moon landing—and the Soviet Union could easily vault ahead of the U.S. in the cosmic steeplechase.

But America had achieved rendezvous, docking, and long-duration spaceflight, and even now, as Gemini 12 and its still-hot heat shield was hissing in the waters of the Atlantic Ocean, the Gemini program flag over the Manned Spacecraft Center was being slowly lowered. Within three years, Americans would walk on the moon.


Jeffrey Kluger
Photo credit: Shaul Schwarz

Jeffrey Kluger is Editor at Large at Time, where he has written more than 45 cover stories. Coauthor of Lost Moon: The Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13, which was the basis for the movie Apollo 13, he is also the author of 13 other books including his latest book Gemini: Stepping Stone to the Moon, the Untold Story.

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Featured Excerpt: A Promise Delivered https://www.thehistoryreader.com/military-history/featured-excerpt-a-promise-delivered/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=featured-excerpt-a-promise-delivered Wed, 12 Nov 2025 09:36:38 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=10979 by Ty Seidule and Connor Williams In 2020, a bipartisan act of Congress mandated changing the names of nine military bases previously named for Confederate soldiers. In 2025, Trump bypassed the law to restore the Confederate names. In A Promise Delivered, Ty Seidule and Connor Williams introduce readers to the 10 American heroes who were Read More »

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by Ty Seidule and Connor Williams

In 2020, a bipartisan act of Congress mandated changing the names of nine military bases previously named for Confederate soldiers. In 2025, Trump bypassed the law to restore the Confederate names.

In A Promise Delivered, Ty Seidule and Connor Williams introduce readers to the 10 American heroes who were chosen by Congress’s Naming Commission to replace the names of military bases named after Confederate soldiers. Read on for a featured excerpt.


Chapter 1

“I Felt This Is What a Soldier Is Supposed to Do”

Van Barfoot’s Frontline Fight

Fort Barfoot (previously Fort Pickett)

The hills and landscape around Blackstone, Virginia, have a way of taking a visitor back in time. Situated about an hour’s drive southwest of Richmond and an hour’s drive southeast of Appomattox, some of the vistas and rolling farm country feel like remnants from a bygone era. Few Virginian places surpass the region in evoking the kinds of agriculture and country living that once dominated the state.

In 1941, army engineers found another use for the region: it had enough ready land and resources to train multiple divisions at once. So they established a camp, springing up 1,400 buildings in a little under a year—many of them iconic white, rectangular, bunks-all-in-a-row barracks. Some of these still remain at the camp, a tribute to the generation of soldiers that trained there. Training soldiers remains the fort’s purpose to this day. Owned by the army but operated by the Virginia National Guard, the installation has a very small complement of permanent soldier and civilian workers. But it hosts units from all different services, all of which use the terrain and ranges to train for all sorts of styles and scenarios of war.

It was originally named Camp Pickett, honoring Confederate general George Pickett, who had grown up on a slave labor plantation about an hour away. Unless entirely swept away by false, romantic visions of the Civil War, soldiers training there could never feel proud of that namesake.

Pickett’s main claim to fame then—and now—was having his name attached to the most disastrous charge of the Civil War, on the last day of Gettysburg. His division suffered more than 50 percent casualties during their two-mile-long assault across open fields. They gained no ground of relevance whatsoever and simply pushed the Confederate “high-water mark” about a meaningless mile further than if they had just stayed in the woods they started in. Stripped of revisionist romanticism, “Pickett’s Charge” remains one of the greatest failures of the entire war. It is the last thing soldiers training for battle should emulate.

The rest of Pickett’s war record fares no better. In 1864, he ordered the execution of twenty-two US prisoners of war and threatened to hang ten more for every Confederate prisoner the United States executed. He was also chronically absent from his division, frequently leaving his men to court and marry a teenager half his age. Indeed, most of the flattering letters, actions, and stories about Pickett have proven to be complete fictions, written by his young widow during her fifty-six years following his death.

Even staunch Confederate supporters should feel no love for Pickett. Assigned to command the defense of the last stronghold protecting Richmond in 1865, Pickett instead left his men and retreated to a lengthy lunchtime “shad bake” several miles away. The United States took the ground—and effectively the Confederate capital—while its defender was eating fish.

But since March 24, 2023, the soldiers training there no longer need to find their faith from fictions. The fort now bears the name of Van Barfoot, a southerner, soldier, Medal of Honor recipient, and longtime Virginian whose career and examples of service, courage, and leadership are as inspiring as they come.

Van Thomas Barfoot newly promoted US Army Lieutenant circa 1944.
Van Thomas Barfoot newly promoted US Army Lieutenant circa 1944. Courtesy of Wikimedia. Public domain.

Van Barfoot’s heroism happened when everything hung in the balance. In May 1944, World War II had no conceivable end in sight. From the Pyrenees to the Ukrainian Steppes, Hitler’s Fortress Europe still prevailed. Even while retreating from Stalin’s brutal counterattacks on the eastern front, German armies inflicted gruesome and catastrophic losses: at least ten Eastern European soldiers and civilians died for every soldier lost by the Third Reich.

In the west, German sentries patrolled the cliffs and beaches of Normandy. Northern France, the Low Countries, and Scandinavia still suffered Nazi occupation. Though long-anticipated, the D-Day landings had yet to happen, and their success was far from certain. In Italy, Allied forces fought Nazi units in the chaos of Mussolini’s collapsed state. Romania, Bulgaria, and Hungary fought for the Axis. Partisan warfare engulfed Yugoslavia. From Paris, Vienna, Rome, Athens, Amsterdam. and Copenhagen to Prague, Riga, Warsaw, Sofia, Budapest, and Bucharest, Hitler and his collaborators held every major capital of the Continent.

That spring, the future of the free world would be decided. All throughout Europe, tens of millions of men—most of them foot soldiers—faced off against each other with rifles, combat boots, cunning, and courage. Collectively, they struggled for the future of the Western world. Individually, they focused on the few feet in front of their faces.

Van Barfoot was one of them. He had no long-standing military pedigree. He had no sort of Special Forces training. He had started service as a private. Like most men, his war focused on survival over strategy. And he was about to help make history.

Born into Choctaw heritage in Mississippi; trained in Louisiana, Puerto Rico, and Virginia; and shipped out to the Mediterranean theater of the European War, by May 1944, Technical Sergeant Barfoot found himself in Central Italy, commanding a platoon of about forty men. Rome was barely twenty-six miles away, but the twenty-four-year-old’s marathon of movement had slowed to a cautious crawl.

The unyielding terrain of the Apennine Mountains and the unyielding attacks by fierce German resistance had turned a war characterized by airplanes, tanks, and jeeps into a lethal slog through individual ridges, hills, and houses. Needing to break Germany’s defensive lines in the final fortnight of their push to Rome and hauling their howitzers with pack mules, American infantrymen fought their way through rugged countryside a couple of yards at a time, taking each hill, house, town, depot, and junction as they could.

On May 23, the Third platoon of Company L of the Third Battalion of 157th Infantry Regiment within the Forty-Fifth Infantry Division faced one such scenario. Ahead of them lay a minefield and machine guns guarding a small town. The town needed to be taken, but technology would not help; it would be a battle of the kinds of on-the-ground soldiering skills, sacrifice, and tactical sense that had prevailed since Pericles. Uncertain of the outcome but confident in his training and in his cause, Barfoot volunteered to lead the attack. By the end of the day, Barfoot had secured the area, killed eight enemy soldiers, captured twice that number alive, destroyed a tank, disabled enemy artillery, defended his position, and saved many of his men.

Van Barfoot received the Medal of Honor. But his story is larger than that. It properly starts with how America trained Barfoot and his generation for the steady slog of war, showing how every step in his actions that day represented the steps of so many others. It reminds us that war was more than presidential politics or general’s strategies. For politics are only as powerful as a people’s perseverance, and strategies only as strong as the soldiers’ skills. Leadership stories show us how the war was fought. Barfoot’s story shows us how the war was won.

Start listening to an audio excerpt of A Promise Delivered!

A Promise Delivered. Copyright © 2025 by Ty Seidule and Connor Williams. All rights reserved.


Ty Seidule

Brigadier General TY SEIDULE, U.S. Army (Retired), is Professor Emeritus of History at the United States Military Academy at West Point and served in the army for more than 35 years. He is the author of Robert E. Lee and Me: A Southerner’s Reckoning with the Myth of Lost Cause and served as Vice Chair for the Naming Commission tasked by Congress to rename Department of Defense assets that honor Confederates. He teaches at Hamilton College.

CONNOR WILLIAMS was Lead Historian for the United States Congress’ Naming Commission. He has taught for Yale University, Middlebury College, the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition, and has worked as a public historian and consultant on several other major renaming and reconciliation projects.

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Featured Excerpt: A Biography of a Mountain https://www.thehistoryreader.com/us-history/featured-excerpt-a-biography-of-a-mountain/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=featured-excerpt-a-biography-of-a-mountain Tue, 11 Nov 2025 09:00:58 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=10974 by Matthew Davis In A Biography of a Mountain, Matthew Davis shares a  comprehensive narrative history of Mt. Rushmore, written in light of recent political controversies, and a timely retrospective for the monument’s 100th anniversary in 2025. Read on for a featured excerpt. Prologue Chaos Two nights before my second son was born, UH-72 Lakota Read More »

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by Matthew Davis

In A Biography of a Mountain, Matthew Davis shares a  comprehensive narrative history of Mt. Rushmore, written in light of recent political controversies, and a timely retrospective for the monument’s 100th anniversary in 2025. Read on for a featured excerpt.


Mt. Rushmore, 2014
Mt. Rushmore, 2014. Courtesy of Wikimedia. Public Domain.

Prologue
Chaos

Two nights before my second son was born, UH-72 Lakota helicopters buzzed above my house in northeast Washington, DC. These helicopters are named after the Lakota Nation and are deployed for national emergencies. They were one element used by the DC Army National Guard following the dispersal of peaceful protestors—demanding justice for George Floyd’s murder—outside the White House. The afternoon of June 3, 2020, when my wife went into labor, we saw the others. Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms police guarded roadblocks at Pennsylvania Avenue, our most direct route to the hospital. Tanks lingered on Constitution Avenue where tour buses usually idled. And young men in National Guard uniforms slung assault rifles under the cherry trees across the National Mall.

In the turmoil of my wife’s third trimester of pregnancy, as the world shut down because of Covid-19, we had girded ourselves for an uncertain delivery. But we had not factored in the helicopters and tanks.

The month following Henry’s birth, we had largely taken refuge in our home. My wife, Laurel, was recovering from delivery, and Henry wasn’t going anywhere. I mostly entertained Aiden, our two-year-old, with long drives into bucolic Virginia where he could run around in open space. On July 3, though, we took a cautious family walk to a nearby park and then dined on meatball sandwiches a friend had dropped off. Before his bedtime, Aiden built Magna-Tile towers and plucked flowers from our small backyard, where Laurel and I sat that evening when the kids were asleep. The pop and smoke of store-bought firecrackers mingled with the heat and humidity to create an almost physical film, our beer bottles beaded with sweat. Sluggish from the heat, the sleeplessness of caring for a newborn, and the nonstop parenting of an energetic toddler, this quiet moment with my wife, infrequent as they had become, was its own minor gift. In the cocoon of our backyard and growing family, we paid little attention to what was happening across the country, in the Black Hills of South Dakota, where President Trump was speaking at Mount Rushmore and protests were being organized to greet him.

The early summer had felt chaotic and existential, not solely because of the pandemic or the protests. Through debates over American history and how to memorialize it, deep fissures in national identity were exposed, revealing a country unable—and in some quarters unwilling—to confront the darkness of our national past. So that night, providing his answer to those debates, President Trump gave a speech with a singular vision of American history, its narratives, and its role in our democracy. He had chosen Mount Rushmore as the setting, and when I read about the event, his speech’s tenor and tone, I wondered what it was about the four granite faces that reflected his version of American history. 

For most of my professional life, I had spent time living in, writing about,and working with countries and cultures different from my own. Mongolian. Syrian. Deaf American. When I founded an international literary organization in 2016, my attention often turned to writers across the world and the issues their prose and poetry explored. I wasn’t uninterested in American history, politics, or culture, but I preferred gazing abroad instead of within. 

The summer of 2020 altered my focus, and Trump’s visit to Mount Rushmore captivated me. I did some cursory research: how Rushmore’s place in the Black Hills of South Dakota has served as a point of pain for generations of Native Americans, especially those belonging to the Oceti Sakowin and the Lakota Nation; how its sculptor, Gutzon Borglum, was a famed though flawed artist with controversial politics and a combative personality; how Rushmore’s construction was a publicly funded feat of engineering and endurance.

I would learn more in the coming years—rustle through archives and books; spend time in South Dakota and the Greater Plains; and, most importantly, hear the stories of women and men who have influenced Rushmore’s evolving meaning today: an Oglala and Sicangu Lakota woman who leads an effort to remember the children who died in the Rapid City Indian Boarding School; the president of the Mount Rushmore Society whose family’s roots in the Black Hills originate before Dakota statehood; the first Native American superintendent of Mount Rushmore; and the Oglala Lakota leader of an organization who champions the Land Back movement. Men and women who, that July 3 evening, as I sat on the patio with Laurel, were congregating in different ways in the Black Hills, an evening that would forever change their lives and that of the memorial. 

The mile-high shelf of Harney Peak granite, which was forged billions of years ago miles below the earth, and which now stands as our most visible piece of Americana, deserves to have its story told in full. This book is that attempt. 

During the time spent with this project, I have kept firmly centered the images of my two sons. Their arrival spurred my interest in this topic. Every American generation faces unique challenges, but the American children of this pandemic era have been born into a fast-moving narrative whose current stakes are the future of our democracy. This book has given me the opportunity to think about what it means to be American at the quarter point of the twenty-first century, poised on the cusp of our 250th anniversary. To think about our past, how we represent that past in memorials, and to consider the United States we are developing for our children.

To echo Emerson, if all history is biography, then what can we learn about our country from a biography of a mountain?

A Biography of a Mountain Copyright © 2025 by Matthew Davis. All rights reserved.  


Matthew Davis is the author of When Things Get Dark: A Mongolian Winter’s Tale. His work has appeared in the New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Los Angeles Review of Books and Guernica, among other places. He has been an Eric and Wendy Schmidt Fellow at New America, a Fellow at the Black Mountain Institute at UNLV, and a Fulbright Fellow to Syria and Jordan. He holds an MFA in nonfiction writing from the University of Iowa and an MA in International Relations from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. Davis lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife, a diplomat, and their two young kids.

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The Education of John F. Kennedy https://www.thehistoryreader.com/us-history/the-education-of-john-f-kennedy/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-education-of-john-f-kennedy Wed, 05 Nov 2025 09:36:05 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=10954 by J. Randy Taraborrelli New York Times bestselling author J. Randy Taraborrelli shares with The History Reader how John F. Kennedy (JFK) became a stronger leader after publicly apologizing for the Bay of Pigs disaster, which caused the president global humiliation. Read on to discover the education of JFK. When John F. Kennedy was elected Read More »

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by J. Randy Taraborrelli

New York Times bestselling author J. Randy Taraborrelli shares with The History Reader how John F. Kennedy (JFK) became a stronger leader after publicly apologizing for the Bay of Pigs disaster, which caused the president global humiliation. Read on to discover the education of JFK.


John F. Kennedy Oval Office Photo
John F. Kennedy Oval Office Photo; July 11, 1963. Cecil Stoughton. Public domain. Courtesy of Wikipedia.

When John F. Kennedy was elected president in 1960, he inherited more than a Cold War. He inherited a national security establishment that believed it knew better than any civilian, especially a 43-year-old with a Harvard accent and chronic back pain. The CIA, the Joint Chiefs, and the Pentagon had all operated with near-total autonomy under Eisenhower. They didn’t expect to be second-guessed by someone they saw as young, untested, and maybe a little too intellectual for his own good. From the moment JFK took office, he was caught in a tug-of-war between his own instincts and the forceful advice of these men around him. It nearly cost him everything.

The Bay of Pigs was the first wake-up call.

In April 1961, Jack Kennedy approved a CIA-led plan to invade Cuba and overthrow Fidel Castro. The operation had been developed under Eisenhower, refined by the CIA, and signed off by the military brass. Kennedy was uneasy about it from the beginning. He thought the plan was sloppy and overly optimistic, but the experts insisted it would be quick and clean. Therefore, he reluctantly gave it the green light.

It was a disaster. The Cuban exiles were slaughtered or captured, and Castro emerged even stronger. JFK ended up humiliated on the world stage.

Bobby urged Kennedy to take responsibility. “You have to own up to it,” he told him. “People forgive when you admit mistakes.”

Jackie, on the other hand, was suspicious. Her mother, Janet Auchincloss, wrote to a close friend:

Last night Jacqueline told [me] – “Not one goddamn thing should come out of the President’s mouth in terms of admitting anything in relation to it [Cuba].”

The patriarch, Joe Kennedy, agreed: “The president does not apologize,” he roared. “He’s the goddamn president!”

In the end, JFK sided with Bobby. “There’s an old saying,” he told reporters at a State Department press conference four days later, “that victory has a hundred fathers and defeat is an orphan. I am the responsible officer of this government.” He fell on his sword and did so humbly. He didn’t blame the previous Eisenhower administration or lament what he had inherited from it. What happened under his watch was his fault, he said, and that was the end of it.

While writing JFK: Public Private Secret, I spent a lot of time studying how that single failure shaped pretty much everything that came next. What I discovered was that the Bay of Pigs broke Kennedy’s trust, but it also built his backbone.

Allen Dules; 5th director of the CIA
Allen Dulles, 5th director of the CIA. Public Domain. Courtesy of Wikipedia.

Within months, JFK fired CIA Director Allen Dulles and reshuffled the intelligence leadership. He stopped deferring to titles and medals. He started asking better questions. Most importantly, he stopped being impressed by resumes and started being guided by conscience.

So when the next crisis hit, he was ready.

In October 1962, American spy planes discovered Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba, just ninety miles from Florida. The Joint Chiefs and many in the CIA immediately pushed for airstrikes, followed by an invasion. It was Bay of Pigs 2.0, and this time with nuclear consequences.

But Kennedy had changed. He slowed things down. He insisted on hearing every side. He formed a smaller advisory group called ExComm and demanded honest debate, not groupthink. The loudest voices in the room called for action. But JFK knew what would happen if a single shot were fired: Khrushchev would have to respond, and the world would descend into nuclear war.

“There was no waking or sleeping,” I quote Jackie as having recalled. “No day or night.”

Instead of striking, JFK ordered a naval blockade. It was firm but not aggressive. Importantly, it bought time.

Behind the scenes, JFK opened backchannels to Moscow. He figured Khrushchev wasn’t just an enemy–he was also a man who wanted to avoid annihilation.

It worked. The Soviets agreed to withdraw their missiles. The U.S. quietly agreed not to invade Cuba and also to remove American missiles from Turkey.

Crisis averted. But more importantly, precedent shattered.

In JFK: Public Private Secret, readers will see how close Kennedy came to ignoring his instincts. Again. Most of the men in the room wanted escalation. But this time, JFK stood his ground. “The military are mad,” he confided. “They think in terms of military victory, not human survival.”

It wasn’t just JFK’s brilliance that saved the world. It was the humility of a man who knew what it felt like to get it wrong and not want to make that same mistake again.

As I researched this part of my book, I couldn’t help but wonder: if Kennedy had lived, how far would he have pulled away from Cold War thinking? Would he have drawn down in Vietnam? (In fact, as I wrote, he did have a plan to de-escalate things there.) Could he have reshaped American foreign policy? We’ll never know.

But what we do know is that by the time he and Jackie left for Dallas in November 1963, JFK was no longer the man who nodded politely in briefings and deferred to the so-called experts. He had been burned, and unlike so many others in power, he actually learned from it.

That’s not always part of the Camelot myth. But it should be.


 

Photo credit: Ashton Bingham

J. RANDY TARABORRELLI is the acclaimed author of numerous New York Times bestsellers about the Kennedys, including Jackie, Ethel, Joan: Women of Camelot, adapted as a miniseries by NBC, and The Kennedys – After Camelot, adapted for television by Reelz. His other bestselling works include The Kennedy Heirs and Jackie, Janet & Lee. His most recent book, Jackie: Public, Private, Secret, debuted at No. 3 on the New York Times bestseller list. Taraborrelli is currently adapting both Jackie: Public, Private, Secret and JFK: Public, Private, Secret for television.

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New Books to Read as the Days Get Shorter: November 2025 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/cultural-history/new-books-to-read-as-the-days-get-shorter-november-2025/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-books-to-read-as-the-days-get-shorter-november-2025 Fri, 31 Oct 2025 17:16:58 +0000 https://www.thehistoryreader.com/?p=10945 As the days get shorter and the temperatures drop, you’ll want to stay inside to enjoy these fascinating history books publishing this month. From Lorissa Rinehart’s major biography of the first woman to hold a U.S. federal office to Jeffrey Kluger’s highly anticipated story of NASA’s Gemini program, you can’t go wrong with any of Read More »

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The History Reader Upcoming Books November 2025

As the days get shorter and the temperatures drop, you’ll want to stay inside to enjoy these fascinating history books publishing this month. From Lorissa Rinehart’s major biography of the first woman to hold a U.S. federal office to Jeffrey Kluger’s highly anticipated story of NASA’s Gemini program, you can’t go wrong with any of these history selections.


Winning the Earthquake by Lorissa Rinehart

The first major biography of Jeannette Rankin, a groundbreaking suffragist, activist, and the first American woman to hold federal office.

A suffragist, peace activist, workers’ rights advocate, and champion of democratic reform who ran as a Republican, Rankin remained ever faithful to her beliefs, no matter the price she had to pay personally.  In Winning the Earthquake, Lorissa Rinehart expertly recovers the compelling history behind this singular American hero, bringing her story back to life.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

 
 
A Biography of a Mountain by Matthew Davis

Just in time to celebrate the monument’s 100th anniversary, A Biography of A Mountain combines history with reportage, bringing the complicated and nuanced story of Mt. Rushmore to life. From the land’s origins as sacred tribal ground to the expansion of the American West to the politicized present-day conflict over the site, Matthew Davis writes with sensitivity about the complex past and future of one of America’s most recognizable landmarks.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

Gemini by Jeffrey Kluger

From the bestselling co-author of Apollo 13 comes the thrilling untold story of the pioneering Gemini program that was instrumental in getting Americans on the moon.

Told with Jeffrey Kluger’s signature cinematic storytelling and in-depth research and interviews, Gemini is an edge-of-your-seat narrative chronicling the history of the least appreciated—and most groundbreaking—space program in American history. Finally, Gemini’s story will be told, and finally, we’ll learn the truth of how we landed on the moon.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

A Promise Delivered by Ty Seidule and Connor Williams

In 2020, a bipartisan act of Congress mandated changing the names of nine military bases previously named for Confederate soldiers. Over the course of twenty months, the commission completed their mission, carefully combing through years of American history and hearing from tens of thousands of Americans from all walks of life. The commission ultimately chose ten Americans whose individual heroics reflect the collective best of all that America is and could be. 

This is the inspiring story behind the ten American heroes whose names had been originally chosen, told by two members of the Naming Commission that selected them.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

Indignity: A Life Reimagined by Lea Ypi

The author of Free returns with an extraordinary inquiry into historical injustice, dignity, truth, and imagination.

When Lea Ypi discovers a photo of her grandmother, she is faced with unsettling questions. She had been told all records of her grandmother’s youth were destroyed in the early days of communism in Albania. But there her grandmother is in the photo, taken during her honeymoon, smiling as WWII rages on.

What follows is a thrilling reimagining of the past, spanning the vanished world of Ottoman aristocracy, the making of modern Greece and Albania, a global financial crisis, and the horrors of war and the dawn of communism in the Balkans. By turns epic and intimate, profound and gripping, Indignity shows what it is like to make choices against the tide of history—and reveals the fragility of truth, collective and personal.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

Realm of Ice and Sky by Buddy Levy

Two-time National Outdoor Book Award-winning author Buddy Levy’s thrilling narrative of polar exploration via airship―and the men who sacrificed everything, including their lives, for science, country, and polar immortality. Now available in paperback.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

A pathbreaking new way to examine US history, through the lens of the bestselling video game series: Red Dead Redemption.

Red Dead Redemption and Red Dead Redemption II, set in 1911 and 1899, are the most-played American history video games since The Oregon Trail. Beloved by millions, they’ve been widely acclaimed for their realism and attention to detail. But how do they fare as re-creations of history?

In this engaging book, award-winning American history professor Tore Olsson takes up that question and more. Colorful, fast-paced, and dramatic, Red Dead’s History sheds light on dark corners of the American past for gamers and history buffs alike. Now available in paperback.

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop

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