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While the broad strokes of Robert F. Kennedy's life are well known--from presidential campaign manager to attorney general, senator, and presidential candidate--far less is understood about the deeper forces that shaped his extraordinary transformation. How did an entitled, silver-spooned prep school kid become a champion for the poor and oppressed?
Although his brother's assassination in 1963 marked the turning point, it was Bobby's own encounters with suffering and injustice that truly recalibrated his moral compass. From summiting Canada's Mount Kennedy to speaking in apartheid-era South Africa, from descending into Chilean coal mines to navigating the piranha-infested waters of the Amazon, Kennedy sought to understand the lives of those the world ignored. His moral awakening continued closer to home--in the hunger-stricken shacks in the Mississippi Delta, the impoverished hills and hollers of eastern Kentucky, and the backroads of Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.
Kennedy's final journey--his 1968 campaign for the presidency--cost him his life, but it also secured his legacy. Becoming Bobby Kennedy traces his remarkable evolution into a symbol of peace, justice, empathy, and moral courage, revealing a man whose vision for America remains as urgent and transformative today as it was half a century ago. In this intimate, character-driven retelling of Kennedy's last six years, B.J. Hollars focuses on the experiences that fundamentally transformed the man Kennedy became in the final chapter of his life. Rare interviews and archival research provide new dimensions to this profile.
B.J. Hollars is a writer, documentarian, and professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire. He is the author of more than fifteen books, including Wisconsin for Kennedy: The Primary that Launched a President and Changed the Course of History and Go West Young Man: A Father and Son Rediscover America on the Oregon Trail (Bison Books, 2021). His historical writing and documentary work have received numerous honors, including the Truman Capote Award for Literary Nonfiction, the James B. MacMillan Prize in Southern History for Culture, and an Upper Midwest Emmy Award.
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