Book details JFK affair with teen intern
NEW YORK-Agence France-Presse
Hürriyet photo
John F. Kennedy carried on an 18-month-long affair with a teenaged White
House intern, according to a new book by the woman who claims to have
been the late US
president's lover.
Excerpts of the shocking
memoir, "Once Upon a Secret: My Affair with President John F. Kennedy
and Its Aftermath," were released Monday by the New York Post, which
said it purchased a copy of the book at a local bookstore, although it
is not scheduled for publication until Wednesday.
In her
tell-all memoir, author Mimi Alford, now a 69-year-old grandmother,
recounts the president's tears after the death of his newborn son, and
recalls that he confided to her, while embroiled in the drama of the
Cuban missile crisis that "I'd rather my children red, than dead."
Alford provides intimate details of their relationship, which started in
the summer of 1962, when she was just 19, less than half the age of the
dashing president, who was killed the following year by an assassins'
bullet at the age of 46.
In an excerpt published by The Post,
Alford wrote that she met Kennedy just four days into her internship,
and that he invited her the following day on a personal tour of the
White House residence that included first lady Jackie Kennedy's bedroom.
Now
50 years later, Alford, a retired New York City church administrator,
writes that it was there that she lost her virginity to Kennedy that
day.
"Slowly, he unbuttoned the top of my shirtdress and touched
my breasts," Alford -- at the time Mimi Beardsley -- wrote in the
excerpt.
"Then he reached up between my legs and started to pull
off my underwear. I finished unbuttoning my shirtdress and let it fall
off my shoulders." "After he finished, he hitched up his pants and
smiled at me" before pointing her in the direction of the bathroom, the
Post reported.
"I was in shock," Alford wrote.
"He, on
the other hand, was matter-of-fact, and acted as if what had just
occurred was the most natural thing in the world." The young debutante,
described by one Kennedy biographer as a "tall, slender, beautiful"
college sophomore, continued the relationship for a year and a half --
even traveling with the president on occasion -- until their affair
ended with Kennedy's assassination.
Although they never kissed,
and there was always a "layer of reserve between us, the sex was "varied
and fun" she said, although Kennedy sometimes "acted like he had all
the time in the world. Other times, he was in no mood to linger." During
their affair Kennedy reportedly taught Alford to make scrambled eggs
and to appreciate the music of Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett. Despite
their intimate liaison, she continued to call him Mr. President.
And she explains in her book that it never occurred to her to resist the advances of the leader of the free world.
"The
fact that I was being desired by the most famous and powerful man in
America only amplified my feelings to the point where resistance was out
of the question. That's why I didn't say no to the president," she
wrote.
And when she finished her stint at the press office of
the White House, and returned to Wheaton College in Massachusetts, he
sometimes would call her under the pseudonym Michael Carter.
The
last time she saw him was on November 15, 1963, a week before Kennedy
was gunned down in Dallas. "I'll call you when I get back," he told her.
Alford reminded the president that she was soon to get married.
"I know that, but I'll call you anyway," he replied.
Kennedy
is said to have carried on numerous White House affairs during his
presidency, including with an alleged dalliance with Hollywood starlet
Marilyn Monroe.
The Post wrote that Random House, which
published the book, says that after the president's death Alford
"grieved in private, locked her secret away and tried to start her life
anew, only to find that her past would cast a long shadow -- and
ultimately destroy her relationship with the man she married."
USA,