Seven Days in November 1963

The Kennedy Assassination

Fiction & Literature, Historical
Cover of the book Seven Days in November 1963 by Edward J. Gibbons, iUniverse
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Edward J. Gibbons ISBN: 9781475988987
Publisher: iUniverse Publication: June 4, 2013
Imprint: iUniverse Language: English
Author: Edward J. Gibbons
ISBN: 9781475988987
Publisher: iUniverse
Publication: June 4, 2013
Imprint: iUniverse
Language: English

Living in a Dallas boardinghouse, separated from his wife, Marina, and their two children, Lee Harvey Oswald feels completely powerless and desperate. But on November 19, 1963, he sees two articles in the Dallas Times Herald; one on the front page in which President Kennedy calls for the overthrow of Castro in Cuba, and the other announcing the presidents visit to Dallas this coming Friday. This, Oswald believes, is the opportunity for which he has been waiting.
In Seven Days in November 1963, author Edward J. Gibbons presents a fictionalized account of Kennedys assassination, an event that has posed a tragic, complex puzzle to most of the American public for five decades. Gibbons fits the pieces of that puzzle into a plausible, understandable story that takes place during the course of seven days in Dallas in late November 1963a time of heightened Cold War tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union, focusing on Cuba.
Seven Days in November 1963 tells how Lee Harvey Oswald, the presidents assassin, and Jack Ruby, the man who would kill Oswald two days later on live national television, both had their own twisted, delusional motives for committing their acts of violence. It also explores how the investigation into the assassination was compromised by American intelligence agencies that omitted vital information to protect themselves from responsibility or blame for the presidents death, thus leading to decades of confusion and conspiracy theories about what actually happened.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Living in a Dallas boardinghouse, separated from his wife, Marina, and their two children, Lee Harvey Oswald feels completely powerless and desperate. But on November 19, 1963, he sees two articles in the Dallas Times Herald; one on the front page in which President Kennedy calls for the overthrow of Castro in Cuba, and the other announcing the presidents visit to Dallas this coming Friday. This, Oswald believes, is the opportunity for which he has been waiting.
In Seven Days in November 1963, author Edward J. Gibbons presents a fictionalized account of Kennedys assassination, an event that has posed a tragic, complex puzzle to most of the American public for five decades. Gibbons fits the pieces of that puzzle into a plausible, understandable story that takes place during the course of seven days in Dallas in late November 1963a time of heightened Cold War tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union, focusing on Cuba.
Seven Days in November 1963 tells how Lee Harvey Oswald, the presidents assassin, and Jack Ruby, the man who would kill Oswald two days later on live national television, both had their own twisted, delusional motives for committing their acts of violence. It also explores how the investigation into the assassination was compromised by American intelligence agencies that omitted vital information to protect themselves from responsibility or blame for the presidents death, thus leading to decades of confusion and conspiracy theories about what actually happened.

More books from iUniverse

Cover of the book Out of the Darkness by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book Dr. Zhong’S Pediatric Essentials by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book A Twentieth-Century Argonaut by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book Whirlwind Ii by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book Elnora by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book The Other Women by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book Travels with Stanley by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book Murder on Rye by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book Confessions of a Regressionist by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book The Power of Negotiation by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book A Girl Named Maria by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book Names of H.O.P.E. Leader's Guide by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book Konglish by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book Sixty-One Questions and Answers for New Knowledge and New Thinking in the Twenty-First Century by Edward J. Gibbons
Cover of the book To Christopher by Edward J. Gibbons
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy