The Last Campaign

The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America (eBook, 2013)

The Last Campaign is a great read, an evocative and engaging reminder of the glory and the tragedy of Bobby Kennedy’s run for the presidency in 1968. Thurston’s keen eye for the telling and his fast-paced narrative make The Last Campaign a must-have for any student of American politics.”
—Tom Brokaw

The definitive account of Robert Kennedy’s exhilarating and tragic 1968 campaign for president.

With new research, interviews, and an intimate sense of Kennedy, Thurston Clarke provides an absorbing historical narrative that goes right to the heart of America’s deepest despairs—and most fiercely held dreams—and tells us more than we had understood before about this complicated man and the heightened personal, racial, political, and national dramas of his times.
Amazon.com

More Reviews of The Last Campaign

“A stunning, heartbreaking book, a reminder–which we badly need these days–of just how noble public life can be. Robert Kennedy’s brief, passionate 1968 presidential campaign set a standard of course and candor and sheer gorgeous language that is unlikely ever to be unlikely. This is a book worthy of the man and that moment, an honorable and unforgettable piece of work. The Last Campaign should be required reading for anyone seeking public office, and for the rest of us, too.”
—Joe Klein

The Last Campaign is a triumphant look at Robert F. Kennedy’s heartfelt plunge into the poverty underbelly of America. The reader can’t help but be moved at how deeply Kennedy cared about the underclass. Thurston Clarke has written a smart political book which actually inspires.”
—Douglas Brinkley

The Last Campaign is a magnificent account of the final months in the life of a man who changed so many of us, and the brilliantly told story of a campaign that broke our hearts.”
—E.J. Dionne

“Tremendously moving… Clarke compellingly recreates this “huge, joyous adventure”… Kennedy’s gradual but determined evolution into a fearless, formidable winning candidate makes stupendous reading. The hope he inspired… still provides instructive and pertinent, especially in this election year. Generous without being slavish, beautifully capturing Kennedy’s passion and dignity.”
Kirkus

“…revealing as an iconic portrait of the passionate, turbulent zeitgeist of the 1960s.”
—E.J. Dionne

“Piercingly and painstaking researched, it’s political history written right.”
New York Magazine

“The images from The Last Campaign, Thurston Clarke’s powerful account of Robert F. Kennedy’s campaign for the presidency . . . impel themselves on the reader, touching chords of memory and sorrow.”
—Michael Kennedy, The Boston Globe

“. . . a fine addition to the Kennedy canon.”
—Todd Leopold, CNN

“I’ll be shocked if I read a more devastatingly beautiful book than Thurston Clarke’s The Last Campaign. . . . Robert F. Kennedy’s moral imagination shines in this book, so brightly, so compassionately, so full of literature and light and sacrifice, that it will haunt many readers who had hoped matters of war, poverty and inequality might have been solved 40 years ago.”
The Austin American-Statesman

“Mr. Clarke advances at a sprightly pace, has a keen eye for detail and captures not only the externals but the fascinating inner dynamics of the contest. . . . Captures [Kennedy’s] transformation with skillshowing RFK emerging, page by page, into a brilliant and utterly iconoclastic politician over those short months on the trail.”
—Ted Widmer, New York Observer 

The Last Campaign, a beautifully written and emotionally powerful examination if Robert F. Kennedy’s1968 presidential campaign. . . . Thurston Clarke has built The Last Campaign on an incredible amount of research, both archival and through hundreds of interviews with those who knew Kennedy best. The result is a vivid, intimate, historical portrait of a candidate who knew how to speak to an electorate amid troubled times. . .. Clarke’s books will break your heart but it may also relieve your cynicism, reminding all of us that candidates need not pander to succeed.”
Christian Science Monitor

“Clarke captures the Kennedy campaign in unusually graphic terms, quoting people along motorcade routes, quoting conversations Kennedy had with his staff and leading political figures. He makes the campaign come alive again. . . . This is political storytelling at its zenith.”
Deseret News

“Clarke’s stirring narrative takes readers back to the late 1960s, that idealistic, hopeful–then tragic–time in history.”
Times–Picayune

“Fortunately. . . the author of this book is Thurston Clarke, an excellent writer and super-diligent reporter.”
Toledo Blade

“Well-reported and well-written.”
—Dallas Morning News 

“A ride inside the spinning bubble of [Kennedy’s] frenzied, idealisticdoomed campaign. [Clarke’s]discussion  of the politics of class and race–the “backlash whites” in Indiana, the affluent antiwar voters in Oregon–proves remarkably topical, as is the moral challenge of Kennedy’s speeches on poverty.”
The New Yorker

“The definitive account of Robert Kennedy’s last campaign.”
—Tucson Citizen 

“Clarke comes away with a focused, unique and worthy discovery of what happened during those two and a half months.”
—The Hill (Washington DC)

“Takes a detailed and fascinating look at the period.”
—Hartford Courant

“. . . very well written and offers a ringside seat on tumultuous times.”
—Mike Barry 

“One of the many pleasures of reading Thurston Clarke’s… The Last Campaign… is the introduction it provides to RFK’s fierce moral rhetoric.”
—Nick Hornby

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About the book

He was haunted by his brother’s murder, and by the nation’s seeming inabilities to solve its problems of race, poverty, and the war in Vietnam. Bobby sensed the country’s pain, and when he announced that he was running for president, the country united behind his hopes. Over the action-packed eighty-two days of his campaign, Americans were inspired by Kennedy’s promise to lead them toward a better time. And after an assassin’s bullet stopped this last great stirring public figure of the 1960s, crowds lined up along the country’s railroad tracks to say goodbye to Bobby.

Author – Historian – Speaker