John F. Kennedy carried on an 18-month-long affair with a
teenage White House intern, according to a new book published this week
by a 69-year-old grandmother who claims to be 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 had purchased a copy of the book at a
local bookstore.
In it, author Mimi Alford wrote a tell-all account detailing how at
the time their relationship started in the summer of 1962, she was less
than half the age of the dashing president, assassinated the following
year at age 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.
Fifty years on, Alford -- now a 69-year-old grandmother and retired
New York City church administrator -- writes 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 woman, 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. 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
Alford after the president's death "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."
2 comments:
Aduh aku kurang paham bahasa inggris.. salam kenal aja deh dari aku :) mampir ke blog aku yaa...
http://www.caragampang.com/
hmmmm ada rahasia terbaru lagi ya?
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