|
Post by ADMIN on Aug 14, 2019 19:24:36 GMT -5
These are your reading rooms.Here you'll find books, newspapers, and magazines, some that date back to the early years of the investigation. Each entry contains a reference link that can be used in posts to link back to the book or article. These publications are out of print, and JFK Boards makes no copyright, or ownership claim to these works. If you are the writer, or a legal representative of the writer, and do not want your content shared on this site, please email JFKBoards@mail.com to have the material immediately removed.
|
|
|
Post by Michael Capasse on Aug 14, 2019 20:06:34 GMT -5
Forgive My Grief (1966-1974)by Penn JonesFrom WikiWilliam Penn Jones Jr. (October 14, 1914 – January 25, 1998) was an American journalist, the editor of the Midlothian Mirror and author. He was also one of the earliest John F. Kennedy assassination conspiracy theorists. Jones was known for being an early critic of the Warren Commission's report on the assassination of John F. Kennedy and for alleging that 150 people connected to the assassination may have died under mysterious circumstances. In 1966, he self-published Forgive My Grief, a four-volume work on the assassination of President Kennedy. click on the written title below for the link to that volume;
|
|
|
Post by Michael Capasse on Aug 14, 2019 20:43:54 GMT -5
Joachim Joesten
from Spartacus Educational
Joachim Joesten, the son of a doctor, was born in Cologne, Germany on 29th June, 1907. He attended Nancy University in France and the University of Madrid in Spain. Joesten worked as a journalist for the Weltbuehne.
Joachim Joesten, traveled to Dallas a few weeks after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and spent four days there, interviewing witnesses and examining key locations. He came to the conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald was not a lone gunman. However, he did think that he was involved in the conspiracy to kill Kennedy. "I wish to make it absolutely clear that I believe Oswald innocent only as charged, but that he was involved with the conspirators in some way." click on the written title below for the link to that book;
|
|
|
Post by Michael Capasse on Aug 14, 2019 21:01:44 GMT -5
Destiny In Dallas 1964
by R.B. Denson
From JFK.org
Robert B. Denson As chief investigator for the Jack Ruby defense team from December 1963 to March 1964, Denson interviewed more than 100 acquaintances of Ruby. Denson was heavily involved with defense preparations and sat behind Ruby during the course of the trial. Shortly after the trial, Denson wrote the book Destiny in Dallas (1964).
|
|
|
Post by Michael Capasse on Aug 14, 2019 21:12:06 GMT -5
Shadows of Doubt: The Warren Commission Coverup (1976) by Robert Meunier From the textOn November 22 1963, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the thirty filth president of the United States, was shot to death as he toured the streets of Dallas, Texas. The United States government under the authority of President Lyndon B. Johnson ordained a commission to investigate the facts related to the incident and to report its findings to the president and the American public. That report (The Warren Report) was released on September 24 1964, after ten months of investigation in executive session. It is hoped that this book will act as a catalyst in motivating a confused society to demand a candid review of the facts surrounding the enigma of the assassination of our president. To that end this book is respectfully subscribed...
|
|
|
Post by Michael Capasse on Aug 15, 2019 9:07:18 GMT -5
JFK Assassination File (1969)
by Jesse Curry
From Wiki Jesse Edward Curry (October 3, 1913 – June 22, 1980) was an American police officer who was the chief of the Dallas Police Department from 1960 to 1966. Curry was chief at the time of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in downtown Dallas on November 22, 1963.
In 1969, he wrote a book on the subject of JFK's assassination entitled, "Retired Dallas Police Chief, Jesse Curry Reveals His Personal JFK Assassination File." On November 5, 1969, Curry held a press conference to announce the release of his book said to contain his "personal file" of the assassination. During the interview, Curry expressed his doubts about the Warren Commission's single bullet theory and their finding of a lone assassin. Curry stated: "I'm not sure about it. No one has ever been able to put him (Oswald) in the Texas School Book Depository with a rifle in his hand."
Curry reasoned in another interview: "I think there's a possibility that one [shot] could have come from in front [of the limousine]. We've never, we've never been able to prove that, but just in my mind and by the direction of his blood and brain from the president from one of the shots, it would just seem that it would have to [have] been fired from the front rather than behind. I can't say that I could swear that I believe that it was one man and one man alone. I think there's a possibility there could have been another man."
|
|
|
Post by Michael Capasse on Aug 15, 2019 9:07:43 GMT -5
The Bastard Bullet: A Search for Legitimacy for CE 399
The HSCA The Zapruder Film and the Single Bullet Theory
by Raymond Marcusfrom JFKrestoreThe bullet designated by the Warren Commission as Commission Exhibit 399 has already gained a notoriety, which assures it a place in history. This is so because the Commission itself attributed to this small missile, measuring little more than one inch in length and weighing less than one-half ounce, a performance upon which it rested its entire case against Lee Harvey Oswald as the lone assassin of President John F. Kennedy.
|
|
|
Post by Michael Capasse on Aug 15, 2019 9:08:12 GMT -5
The Sniper's Nestby Allan EagleshamFrom Mary Ferrell Foundation
The Fourth Decade features essays by Jerry Rose, Peter Whitmey, Gary Mack, Martin Shackleford, Peter Dale Scott, Jack White, Milicent Cranor, Dennis Ford, Ian Griggs, James Folliard, Richard Bartholomew, Christopher Sharrett, William Weston, Hal Verb, Hugh Murray, Vince Palamara, Barbara LaMonica, John J. Johnson, Harrison Livingstone, Bill Kelly, and many other contributors.
|
|
|
Post by Michael Capasse on Aug 15, 2019 10:56:07 GMT -5
Investigation of a Homicide (1969) by Judy Bonner
Bonner was a friend of Sgt. Gerald Hill, this book chronicles his actions Nov 22nd in a timeline. This is a very rare book. Unfortunately, the pictures in this copy are of poor quality
Investigation of a Homicide by Judy Bonner
|
|
|
Post by Michael Capasse on Aug 15, 2019 11:07:58 GMT -5
Six Seconds In Dallas (1967)
b y Josiah Thompson text from linkIn Six Seconds in Dallas, Thompson argued that there was a conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy. Based on an examination of the Zapruder film, Thompson claimed in the book that three men fired four shots at Kennedy in Dealey Plaza: the first shot was fired from the Texas School Book Depository and struck Kennedy in the back; the second shot was fired from the Dallas County Records building and struck Governor John Connally; the third and fourth shots were fired from the Texas School Book Depository and the "grassy knoll" and almost simultaneously struck Kennedy in the head. In November 1967, prior to the publication of the book, Thompson stated that the Dal-Tex Building may have been the location of the second shot. He said that a young man was arrested within minutes after the shooting in that building, taken in for questioning by police, then disappeared in the confusion. link provided by archive.org
|
|