From award-winning journalist and author Isabel Vincent, a revelatory portrait of RFK Jr., tracing his astonishing journey from young socialite to environmental activist, his battles with addiction, and his rise to the Trump administration’s Secretary for Health and Human Services, based on untapped material and the author’s interviews with dozens of sources close to him.
Born into one of the most storied families in American history, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. has spent his life grappling with the weight of his family’s legacy, the struggles of his own personal demons, and his quest to carve out a distinct identity as an environmental crusader, public health critic, and political maverick. With unparalleled depth, RFK JR. portrays a man whose public life has often been in conflict with his private battles.
Isabel Vincent (born 1965 in Toronto) is a Canadian investigative journalist who writes for the New York Post, an alumna of the University of Toronto Varsity newspaper, and the author of several books.
This was a very disappointing book. I was hoping it would explore how a privileged person from a storied family could turn against everything his family believes in, but this book did not cover that. The first 20% of the book was about JFK and RFK and their policies in the ‘60’s, which felt like a long tangent. It went into too much detail on events that didn’t matter to the story and glossed over events that DID matter. Even though the author was quite sympathetic towards Jr, she still couldn’t fully disguise the fact that he’s a disgusting, entitled person.
RFK Jr.: The Fall and Rise reads less like a conventional political biography and more like an unfiltered excavation of a man caught between myth and self-destruction. The intimacy is novelistic at times—but also moving as it reveals a flawed, but ambitious man, trying to understand himself. In all the ways fractured characters in drama demand attention—this look at RFK, Jr. reminded me that power, ambition, guilt and personal chaos can all exist simultaneously.
This book reminds the reader of the Kennedy legacy (addiction, ego, grief, service, and reinvention) while creating a portrait that feels both deeply human and deeply polarizing. The book created an emotional whiplash throughout, where admiration and frustration coexisted in equal measure.
As a reader, I found myself pulled into a deeply conflicted emotional space. There are moments that reveal a man capable of genuine conviction and even self-sacrifice, particularly in his sense of mission and legacy. But those moments are often shadowed by choices and impulses that feel strikingly self-serving. That tension is what makes the book so compelling—it’s not trying to resolve the contradictions, it lets them exist side by side for the reader to come to their own conclusions.
RFK Jr. ultimately feels less like a singular figure and more like a reflection of America itself—defined by ambition and idealism, yet riddled with contradiction. His story captures a nation still striving toward purpose while wrestling with its own fractured identity.
I saw this on my list of new books and even though I abhor how he has conducted his public life, I decided to read it and keep an open mind. I am a retired medical professional, so I view things with that eye. I do believe immunizations are important and have saved lives and are responsible for preventing death and sequelae from diseases we don't think about today due to use of immunizations. I read that RFK Jr. was brought up in a neglectful environment, that has the protection afforded the rich but really should have been reported to child protective services. I see that after the assassination of his father, his family life disintegrated. He is an opportunist, egoist, and sexual addicted man who leads a double life. So why is he heading the CDC enough said. The author did her best with no authorization but read between the lines, our country is faltering
Extremely interesting biography of RFK, Jr. He is the son of Bobby and Ethel Kennedy who has become so controversial. RFK is a really complex character. I went into the book really not liking the man. We hear a lot of his quirky experiences (and there are a lot of them.) He also expresses in the book his deep desire to do the right thing. He admits that he is a serial cheater. He admits to taking all of the drugs we have heard about. What I didn't know is that RFK, Jr was instrumental in getting the Hudson River cleaned. His first years were as an environmental advocate. However, he got linked into the vaccine debate which has cause a real issue with family and the public.
I thought the writing was a bit biased against Kennedy, but he also humanized the man a lot. I would recommend reading the book. It is enlightening in many ways. I still do NOT support the man, though.
**pre-pub: looks like the author is going to bring up the topic of Mary Kennedy's suicide and that her hands were in the noose. I read about this in the Kennedy wives book "Ask Not" by Maureen Callahan and it blew my mind. What a curse this family can have, but amazing that it didn't hit everyone.**
Not sure what to make of this book. The title is highly misleading as the bulk of the book chronicles Kennedy’s “fall” (all well deserved criticism) but very little about the “rise” if there really is one. The author seems skeptical. Very disjointed at times especially in the beginning. It almost seemed like the author was unsure what the direction and focus should be.
There was so much hype and honestly, aside from yet another bizarre incident ( a raccoon penis?!) and yet, another disastrous marriage, Cheryl Hines, sort of a ho hum read.