Published by Flatiron Books on July 9, 2019
Pages: 384
Format: ebook
Genres: Memior, Nonfiction
See it @ Goodreads
Synopsis
A powerful portrait of the lives of four boarding school graduates who died too young, John F. Kennedy, Jr. among them, by their fellow Andover classmate, New York Times bestselling author William D. Cohan.
In his masterful pieces for Vanity Fair and in his bestselling books, William D. Cohan has proven to be one of the most meticulous and intrepid journalists covering the world of Wall Street and high finance. In his utterly original new book, Four Friends, he brings all of his brilliant reportorial skills to a subject much closer to home: four friends of his who died young. All four attended Andover, the most elite of American boarding schools, before spinning out into very different orbits. Indelibly, using copious interviews from wives, girlfriends, colleagues, and friends, Cohan brings these men to life on the page.
Jack Berman, the child of impoverished Holocaust survivors, uses his unlikely Andover pedigree to achieve the American dream, only to be cut down in an unimaginable act of violence. Will Daniel, Harry Truman's grandson and the son of the managing editor of The New York Times, does everything possible to escape the burdens of a family legacy he's ultimately trapped by. Harry Bull builds the life of a careful, successful Chicago lawyer and heir to his family's fortune...before taking an inexplicable and devastating risk on a beautiful summer day. And the life and death of John F. Kennedy, Jr.--a story we think we know--is told here with surprising new details that cast it in an entirely different light. Four Friends is an immersive, wide-ranging, tragic, and ultimately inspiring account of promising lives cut short, written with compassion, honesty, and insight. It not only captures the fragility of life but also its poignant, magisterial, and pivotal moments.
There is something off-kilter with this book. Cohan writes about his time at Phillips Academy in Andover, MA. Andover is rated the top prep-school in the country where it’s graduates go on to Havard or Yale, becoming the cream of the crop in American society.
Cohan, taken with the death of four of his contemporaries; they were not friends, just four young men attending Andover at the same time as Cohan, that he decided to write about their deaths. While singing the praises for Andover, Cohan, in a tabloid fashion, describes their years at Andover and goes to reveal how they met their end. I am not sure of the purpose of this book, other than Cohan survived, and his four very privileged contemporaries did not.