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368 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1989
"There was no mystery about Bobby. You knew exactly where he stood. He'd shown it as Attorney General when he'd used his power to allow the marches to happen and to protect the demonstrators when he could. It would have been a different civil rights movement without Bobby Kennedy. The voter registration, the lunch-counter sit-ins, the pray-ins were often violent, but he kept it from being the bloodbath it could have been. There is no counting the lives he saved, the bloodshed he avoided. Bobby was a humanist. He was not a do-gooder, but a good-doer, a knight of old in a button-down-collar shirt, a man who wanted to right wrong. There was no doubt in my mind that I wanted Robert Kennedy as a senator making my country's laws, and then to run for President. Bobby had been the strength in the Kennedy family. John was always "raised eyebrows," thinking about the next advantageous move; the "piano player" who sat out front with the spotlight on him. The other cat who kept time was the drummer, who never got the spotlight, he never took the solos, but he kept time, he kept the beat going. Bobby was the drummer."