A review by bargainsleuth
The Editor by Steven Rowley

4.0

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You know I can’t resist a book about the Kennedys, and after successful historical novels like Jackie and Maria: A Novel of Jackie Kennedy and Maria Callas and And They Called It Camelot, I decided to take a chance with another Kennedy historical fiction novel called The Editorbecause of the low price on Kindle when I saw it.

It’s the early 1990s. Let’s just start by saying that James has mother issues. So much so that he’s written a novel about his mother, but rarely communicates with her. His agent has sent him to a publisher because there’s some interest in his book, which is a new experience for James. When the editor he meets turns out to be Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, he’s gobsmacked. Why? Not just because she’s Jackie O., but because his mother revered the Kennedys; James middle name is Frances, told many times for Robert Frances Kennedy. So this is A. Big. Deal.

The book is humorous, poignant, and enlightening to me about gay life in New York in the early 1990s. James’ partner, Daniel, appears in only a few scenes, but is a fully-formed character. James’ relationship with his mother seems so real; even though I get along with my mother and always have, it is because of concessions I’ve made for the good of the relationship. James seems to refuse to take his mother as she is, and has issues with her because of it.

James keeps delaying the ending of his book, because he knows he’ll have to visit his mother in order to do it. James’ mother is a cold duck, not very giving of affection and doesn’t seem to care that his book is going to be published. When James does visit, she tells him some earth-shattering news that sends him reeling. I’m not going to spoil it here, but it’s a doozy. James spends much of the rest of the book dealing with the fallout of this news, and it affects him in all facets of life, most especially as a writer.

James and Jackie’s relationship seemed real, the way an editor and writer work together (or so I’m told). There’s a trip to Hyannis Port to work during the Democratic National Convention of 1992 (and a discussion of candidate Bill Clinton as well), as well as many lunches and get-togethers with Jackie. I thought the author did an all right job of portraying Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis according to the rare reports of her private life we have gotten over the years. She had a wonderful sense of humor, once you got to know her. You read some of that here. Her desire for privacy makes the dialogue and situations seem more real, not less.

The ending of the book, when Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis dies, is tastefully done and rather poignant. There’s closure in this book, not just for James and Jackie, but James and his mother.