Portrait of an Assassin.

“To Bill Dickinson in appreciation of your friendship and your great help during the rugged days of 1965. I am deeply grateful for your many kindnesses and I am looking forward to working with you for the Republican cause in the months ahead": First Edition of PORTRAIT OF THE ASSASSIN, warmly inscribed BY PRESIDENT FORD To Close Personal Friend and Congressman Bill Dickinson

Portrait of an Assassin.

FORD, Gerald R. and John R. Stiles.

Item Number: 128399

New York : Simon and Schuster, 1965.

First edition of the first book about the Kennedy assassination and Lee Harvey Oswald to be authored by a member of the Warren Commission. Octavo, original cloth. Association copy, inscribed [full page] by the author in the year of publication to fellow congressman Bill Dickinson on the front free endpaper, “To Bill Dickinson in appreciation of your friendship and your great help during the rugged days of 1965. I am deeply grateful for your many kindnesses and I am looking forward to working with you for the Republican cause in the months ahead. Betty joins me in extending the best wishes of all the Fords to you and your family. Gerald R. Ford. 12/12/65.” The recipient, Alabama Representative Bill Dickinson was the longest serving Republican congressman in Alabama history, representing the 2nd congressional district. He served on the influential House Armed Services Committee in the 1970s and 1980s. He was a leading member of the conservative wing of the Republican Party and remained friends with Gerald Ford after he moved to the White House. Fine in a near fine dust jacket. Jacket design by Carl Smith. Photograph on the front of jacket by James Murray. An exceptional association.

Just one week after the assassination of President Kennedy in Dallas, President Johnson appointed a commission, chaired by Chief Justice Earl Warren, to investigate the tragic events. Then Representative Ford’s seat on the panel put the Michigan Congressman in the national spotlight. In this volume, the first such book written by a member of the Commission, Ford and co-author John Stiles (Ford’s personal assistant during the Commission’s work) reconstruct, in a novel-like format, the path that led Oswald to the Texas School Book Depository on November 22, 1963, from his sojourn in the Soviet Union to his frustrated defection to Cuba. Strikingly sympathetic to the closure sought by innumerable conspiracy theorists, the authors nevertheless discern in these events “no meaning beyond the will of the killer to pull the trigger”—save the philosophical conclusion “that meaningful personal relationships are still the most important elements in any society… We do not live alone, and neither a Lee Oswald nor anyone else can succeed in so doing.”

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