- English
- Español
- 中文(简体)
- 中文(繁體)
- Deutsch
An engrossing debut novel that cannily reimagines the extraordinary life and mysterious death of bohemian Georgetown socialite Mary Pinchot Meyer— secret lover of JFK, ex-wife of a CIA chief, sexual adventurer, LSD explorer and early feminist living by her own rules.
She was a longtime lover of JFK.
She was the ex-wife of a CIA chief.
She was the sister-in-law of the Washington Post's Ben Bradlee.
She believed in mind expansion and took LSD with Timothy Leary.
She was a painter, a socialite and a Bohemian in Georgetown during the Cold War.
And she ended up dead in an unsolved crime a year after JFK's assassination.
The diary she kept was never found.
Until now. . . .
"Devilishly creative." —Kitty Kelley author of Jackie Oh! and The Family: The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty
"In this novel that is part love story, part thriller and 100% page turner, Paul Wolfe takes you inside the sexual playgrounds of Cold War Washington." —Sally Koslow, author of Another Side of Paradise
"A compassionate and intricate portrait. . . . Wolfe's inspired study of a cryptic woman is credible and haunting." —Booklist, starred review
"The author deftly simulates a complicated woman's diary, creating a document that feels entirely authentic. . . . shedding light on a woman with a front seat to American history." —Kirkus Reviews
"This imagined diary . . . simmers with intrigue and sensuality, painting in vivid colors both the magnificence and dark underbelly of Camelot" — Newsweek