First, I have to say that Cohan is a journalist, and what they do is take the smallest amount of information and manage to write copious amounts from that. There is so much wrong with this book I don't know where to start.
First, the title. It should have been 'Four People I Went to School with But Barely Knew'. If these were his 'friends' then you would expect lots of personal stories and observations, and that is sadly missing.
Second, the subtitle. Although much was expected of JFK, Jr (but you get the impression that he would not live up to it) two of the others, although successful, were not game changers and one was a bit of a slacker.
Third, the prologue. He goes into quite a bit of detail about another person in their school who seriously injures someone in a car accident. It has nothing to do with the four 'friends', and just seems like a random section.
Fourth, the premise. Apparently, if you are well off, or well connected, you don't have to make an effort because people will overlook quite a bit. Andover appears to be a school for spoiled rich boys who can flaunt the rules, do poorly, and still get into an Ivy.
Fifth, the writing style. I found all the stories to skip around a bit too much. Their was not a lot of continuity.
Sixth, the research. Or I should say, lack thereof. It seems that he contacted anyone who was even remotely connected with these four boys, and reports their observations as absolute truth. I felt like I was in a Ferris Bueller loop and Simone was about to tell me about her 'best friend's sister's boyfriend's brother's girlfriend heard from this guy who's going with the girl...' and had a fascinating story to tell. At one point he relies on a woman in a salon who eavesdrops on JFK's wife. Every time he had to admit 'XX refused to comment' he managed to find someone who talked to someone else and THEY said...
Seventh, his quotes. If someone is incapable of putting together two thoughts in a cohesive way, or complete a sentence without repeating themselves six times, WHY would you want to quote them directly?
Eighth, his ego. I felt like he would bring up topics JUST so he could inject himself into the story.
Cohan took the tragic deaths of four people he went to school with and (I'm sure without family approval) tried to turn it into a full book.
I originally filed this book as a DNF about halfway through the second segment. The first segment about Jack Berman was touching, but the second segment about Will Daniel (grandson of Harry Truman) seemed pointless.But it was for book club, so I picked it back up determined to finish. And, Hey! Maybe it would get better! Besides, I was interested in what he had to say about JFK, Jr, as I didn't know much about him. Unfortunately, the JFK, Jr segment was the worst part. I didn't have to know how bad his feet smelled, or how someone threw up on the table when invited over for dinner.