The scene of John Wilkes Booth
shooting Abraham Lincoln in Ford's Theatre is among the most vivid and
indelible images in American history. The literal story of what happened
on April 14, 1865, is familiar: Lincoln was killed by John Wilkes
Booth, a lunatic enraged by the Union victory and the prospect of black
citizenship. Yet who Booth really was—besides a killer—is less well
known. The magnitude of his crime has obscured for generations a
startling personal story that was integral to his motivation.
My Thoughts Be Bloody, a
sweeping family saga, revives an extraordinary figure whose name has
been missing, until now, from the story of President Lincoln's death.
Edwin Booth, John Wilkes's older brother by four years, was in his day
the biggest star of the American stage. He won his celebrity at the
precocious age of nineteen, before the Civil War began, when John Wilkes
was a schoolboy. Without an account of Edwin Booth, author Nora Titone
argues, the real story of Lincoln's assassin has never been told. Using
an array of private letters, diaries, and reminiscences of the Booth
family, Titone has uncovered a hidden history that reveals the reasons
why John Wilkes Booth became this country's most notorious assassin.
These
ambitious brothers, born to theatrical parents, enacted a tale of
mutual jealousy and resentment worthy of a Shakespearean tragedy. From
childhood, the stage-struck brothers were rivals for the approval of
their father, legendary British actor Junius Brutus Booth. After his
death, Edwin and John Wilkes were locked in a fierce contest to claim
his legacy of fame. This strange family history and powerful sibling
rivalry were the crucibles of John Wilkes's character, exacerbating his
political passions and driving him into a life of conspiracy.
To
re-create the lost world of Edwin and John Wilkes Booth, this book takes
readers on a panoramic tour of nineteenth-century America, from the
streets of 1840s Baltimore to the gold fields of California, from the
jungles of the Isthmus of Panama to the glittering mansions of Gilded
Age New York. Edwin, ruthlessly competitive and gifted, did everything
he could to lock his younger brother out of the theatrical game. As he
came of age, John Wilkes found his plans for stardom thwarted by his
older sibling's meteoric rise. Their divergent paths—Edwin's an upward
race to riches and social prominence, and John's a downward spiral into
failure and obscurity—kept pace with the hardening of their opposite
political views and their mutual dislike.
The details of the conspiracy to kill Lincoln have been well documented elsewhere. My Thoughts Be Bloody tells
a new story, one that explains for the first time why Lincoln's
assassin decided to conspire against the president in the first place,
and sets that decision in the context of a bitterly divided family—and
nation. By the end of this riveting journey, readers will see Abraham
Lincoln's death less as the result of the war between the North and
South and more as the climax of a dark struggle between two brothers who
never wore the uniform of soldiers, except on stage.