An updated edition discusses some startling recent work which seems to lead to an answer to the ultimate conspiracy theory After nearly 1000 books, half a dozen journals, two official inquiries, several million pages of declassified documents, dozens of TV documentaries, and hundreds of websites, is there anything left to say about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy? Hell, yes. The Kennedy assassination remains both the greatest whodunit of the post-World War II era and the best route into recent U.S. history. In this short book, taking it as proved that Lee Harvey Oswald was indeed the patsy he claimed to be before he was murdered, Robin Ramsay looks at the assassination through the work of the researchers who refused to buy the official cover-up story that Lee Harvey Oswald was the assassin. He explores the major alternative theories produced by the critics of the official version, the major landmarks in the Kennedy assassination research, and the disinformation produced on the subject since the event.
Tired Of All Those Big Books On 1122? - Try This Little One!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
Hi Gang: One of the shortest and easiest to read books ever written on 1122 has got to be Robin Ramsay's 'Who Shot JFK?'. Complete with footnotes and a backgrounder history covering a critique of the 36th President's Commission, the Trial of Clay Laverne Shaw, the H.R. Select Committee On Assassinations, the movie 'JFK' and the AARB, this book is about as short as any book can be when it comes to understanding 1122 and the events that followed it; the book's only shortcoming is a lack of an index but at 93 pages who really needs one. Right. What really makes this book 'sing' is its 'take no prisoners' attitude. Right from its bold first paragraph declaration that 'LBJ Did It' straight through to its strong opinions on the various literature which grew out of 1122 - including a denouncation of my beloved 'William Torbitt' which left me dizzy - this book is no 'wallflower' when it comes to declaring where it stands. The book's concluding attack on the academic historian community for ignoring the events of 1122 is worth the read in itself. This loud, proud and little book is a nice addition to my modest 1122 collection of books. Jim Yar 104 - 725 Bernard Street Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1K 3H7
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