Doris Kearns Goodwin's personal history in "An Unfinished Love Story"

Doris Kearns Goodwin is a rare presence on our national stage – an historian with academic cred and pop-culture cachet. Her work, of course, is serious, but she shares it with joy, and sometimes a laugh, as when she made an entrance on “The Late Show Starring Stephen Colbert” on a litter carried by Lincoln impersonators.

“It’s fun when a younger person comes up to you and says, ‘You know, my kids saw you on “The Simpsons”‘!” Goodwin said.

The Lincoln biographer is honored during a late-night appearance. / Credit: “The Late Show Starring Stephen Colbert”

Goodwin, now 81, is renowned for telling the story of America, often through the prism of the presidency, including with her biographies of Abraham Lincoln, Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt, the Kennedys, and Lyndon B. Johnson.

Her latest book does that, too, and it’s deeply personal. “An Unfinished Love Story” (to be published April 16 by Simon & Schuster) is about her late husband, Richard Goodwin, and his adventures in the turbulent 1960s, writing speeches for titans like John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy and LBJ.

/ Credit: Simon & Schuster

And it’s about Richard and Doris. “He was an extraordinary character who somehow traversed almost every important moment in the 1960s,” Goodwin said. “He’s like Zelig in a certain sense in the ’60s.”

Some of the most iconic lines in the ’60s came right from Richard Goodwin’s typewriter: The Great Society. Ripples of hope. We shall overcome.

“Dick loved poetry, he loved drama,” Goodwin said. “I mean, using the anthem of the civil rights movement in the middle of [LBJ’s] great speech after the Selma demonstrations was almost a moment of genius that came to him.”

Before becoming a fixture at the side of presidents, Richard Goodwin had a fast rise: Harvard Law, Supreme Court clerk, and then Congressional investigator of the rigged TV quiz shows of the 1950s. President Kennedy later brought Goodwin into his inner circle. After Kennedy’s death, so did President Johnson, who looked to Goodwin for some rhetorical magic, as the LBJ tapes revealed. In one phone call Johnson asked, “Why not just ask [Goodwin] if he can’t put some sex in it? I’d ask him if he couldn’t put some rhyme in it and some beautiful Churchillian phrases…”

“The tapes were just so revealing,” said Goodwin. “Especially when you hear him talking about my husband that way.”

Doris Kearns was a 24-year-old White House Fellow while Lyndon Johnson (6’4

She writes that LBJ could be flat and dry in his public remarks, but not in private. “If people had known the way he talks on the tapes, if they had listened to him tell stories, they were brilliant,” she said. “The private Lyndon Johnson is the most formidable, interesting, brilliant character I think I’ve ever met in my life.”

Doris Kearns first met Johnson in 1967, when the towering Texan asked the young White House fellow for a dance. “I mean, what a way! He really twirled me around the floor. And then he whispered to me that he wanted me to be assigned directly to him in the White House.”

Johnson’s advisers were initially on edge about the 24-year-old Harvard grad student’s anti-war views. But she quickly became someone he trusted, talking to her for hours during the bittersweet twilight of his life.

“He could be mean at times,” she said. “But underneath there was this force that wanted to make the country a better place. And the war in Vietnam cut much of that … without that, there’s no question he would have been one of the great presidents. But even now, he is one of those great presidents.”

Richard Goodwin and Doris Kearns married in 1975. / Credit: Marc Peloquin/Doris Kearns Goodwin

Doris and Richard Goodwin met at Harvard after LBJ left office, and were married in 1975. They lived in leafy Concord, Massachusetts, raising a family and working, until Richard’s death in 2018.

These days, Goodwin stays busy with history, but also keeps a close eye on politics.

Historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, with correspondent Robert Costa, at Minute Man National Historical Park in Concord, Mass. / Credit: CBS News

When asked what is at stake in the coming election, Goodwin replied, “It’s not an exaggeration to say democracy is at stake. I mean, I think about Lincoln when he said, early on, that the central point of the fight of the Civil War was really whether democracy would exist. Because if you could decide, as a Southern set of states did, that they lost an election, so they’re going to secede from the Union, then democracy is an absurdity. And that’s the hallmark of our system, is that you lose an election and you accept it with grace.”

Costa asked, “What do you say to Americans who look at what’s happening with this election, and they just want to tune out, not pay attention?”

“Tuning out and not paying attention is an action,” Goodwin said. “In fact, somehow not participating is even worse than many other things you can do. Because it means you’re saying, I don’t care, it’s not important. And that’s a cowardly thing to say, because it’s not true.”

And Americans, she said, can always turn to the past for lessons.

“I still think if we look back at history, that somehow America’s pulled through each one of these tough times, and we’ve come out strengthened,” Goodwin said. “It’s hard to see exactly how that’s going to happen now, but it’s going to happen, [but] only if people start marching, only if people start fighting for the rights they believe are being taken away.

“When conscience is fired, and the majority will is exercised, we somehow come through,” she said. “And I think we will again.”

For more info:

  • “An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s” by Doris Kearns Goodwin (Simon & Schuster), in Hardcover, Large Print, eBook and Audio formats, available April 16 via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org
  • doriskearnsgoodwin.com
  • Photo of Richard Goodwin and President John F. Kennedy by Jacques Lowe, courtesy of the Jacques Lowe Estate

Story produced by Robert Marston. Editor: Mike Levine.

See also:

    News Related

    OTHER NEWS

    Lawsuit seeks $16 million against Maryland county over death of pet dog shot by police

    A department investigator accused two of the officers of “conduct unbecoming an officer” for entering the apartment without a warrant, but the third officer was cleared of wrongdoing, the suit says. Read more »

    Heidi Klum shares rare photo of all 4 of her and Seal's kids

    Heidi Klum posted a rare picture with husband Tom Kaulitz and her four kids: Leni, 19, Henry, 18, Johan, 17, and Lou, 14, having some quality family time. Read more »

    European stocks head for flat open as markets struggle to find momentum

    This is CNBC’s live blog covering European markets. European markets are heading for a flat open Tuesday, continuing lackluster sentiment seen at the start of the week in the region ... Read more »

    Linda C. Black Horoscopes: November 28

    Nancy Black Today’s Birthday (11/28/23). This year energizes your work and health. Faithful domestic routines provide central support. Shift directions to balance your work and health, before adapting around team ... Read more »

    Michigan Democrats poised to test ambitious environmental goals in the industrial Midwest

    FILE – One of more than 4,000 solar panels constructed by DTE Energy lines a 9.37-acre swath of land in Ann Arbor Township, Mich., Sept. 15, 2015. Michigan will join ... Read more »

    Gaza Is Falling Into ‘Absolute Chaos,’ Aid Groups Say

    A shaky cease-fire between Israel and Hamas has allowed a surge of aid to reach Palestinians in Gaza, but humanitarian groups and civilians in the enclave say the convoys aren’t ... Read more »

    Bereaved Israeli and Palestinian families to march together in anti-hate vigil

    Demonstrators march against the rise of antisemitism in the UK on Sunday – SUSANNAH IRELAND/REUTERS Bereaved Israeli and Palestinian families will march together as part of an anti-hate vigil on ... Read more »
    Top List in the World