On November 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was shot and killed in Dallas, Texas. Within hours, Lee Harvey Oswald was in police custody. Two days later, Jack Ruby gunned him down on live television. The Kennedy assassination shocked the world and has remained the most enduring mystery in American history.
For over sixty years, the questions have never
Was Oswald really the lone gunman?
What role did the CIA, the Mafia, or foreign powers play?
Why did the Warren Commission fail to convince the public?
What secrets lie inside the Zapruder film and the declassified JFK files?
And why does November 22, 1963 still haunt America today?
The Kennedy Assassination takes readers from the motorcade in Dealey Plaza to the chaos at Parkland Hospital, from Oswald’s arrest to Jackie Kennedy’s grief and the state funeral that transfixed the world. It explores conspiracy theories, debunkings, and the cultural legacy of JFK’s death—from Oliver Stone’s JFK to modern-day investigations.
Rich in detail, accessible in style, and deeply researched, this book offers both clarity and complexity. It does not promise easy answers—but it brings history, evidence, and myth together in one compelling narrative.
If you are fascinated by history, politics, or true crime, this is the essential guide to the assassination that changed the 20th century.
Brendan's love affair with writing started at a very young age. His earliest series, the original crayon and pencil versions of Nukular Wars in Space (originally entitled Nukular Wars in Spac, the 'e' was added later) sprouted from his early love of science fiction.
Ever the creative type, Brendan found what opportunities he could to put his ideas on paper. Choosing creative options on assignments, jotting down poetry, and making up songs with his friends, Brendan laid the groundwork for what would become his true passion.
Though he had attempted on multiple occasions to begin a novel-length work, he never found the inspiration to stick with it until his freshman year of college. While walking through the snow on an empty field on the Villanova University campus, he conceived the beginnings of The Traveler. The first two installments from the series (The Book of Iden) are available now with parts 3 and 4 in the edit stage.
Oh, and he didn't write 'They Loved Him to Death.' Goodreads has ignored his messages about that.