What Books Are Similar To Mary'S Mosaic About JFK?

2026-01-06 14:52:45 73
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3 Answers

Ben
Ben
2026-01-09 16:20:50
If you're into deep dives like 'Mary's Mosaic' and the whole JFK conspiracy rabbit hole, you've gotta check out 'JFK and the Unspeakable' by James W. Douglass. It’s not just about the assassination—it’s this chilling exploration of how Kennedy’s shift toward peace might’ve made him targets in his own government. The way Douglass connects the dots is spine-tingling, like reading a thriller but with footnotes.

Another wild one is 'Crossfire' by Jim Marrs. It’s like the encyclopedia of JFK theories, packed with photos, witness accounts, and enough twists to make your head spin. I lost sleep over the chapter about the 'magic bullet.' And if you want something newer, 'Reclaiming History' by Vincent Bugliosi tries to debunk conspiracies, but even his thoroughness leaves weird gaps that make you side-eye everything.
Nathan
Nathan
2026-01-09 22:03:23
I stumbled onto 'Mary's Mosaic' after binging political mysteries, and it led me to 'A Cruel and Shocking Act' by Philip Shenon. It focuses on the Warren Commission’s flaws—like how they ignored witnesses or rushed conclusions. Shenon’s writing feels like a detective novel, especially when he reveals how much evidence got 'lost.'

For a raw, personal angle, 'JFK: The Smoking Gun' by Colin McLaren re-examines the case with modern forensics. It’s technical but addictive, like watching a cold case show where the detective won’t quit. Bonus: 'The Man Who Killed Kennedy' by Roger Stone is polarizing (Stone’s… a character), but his LBJ theory is so audacious, it’s hard to look away.
Vanessa
Vanessa
2026-01-12 02:56:29
Ever fall into a book and feel like you’ve entered a shadow world? That’s 'Mary’s Mosaic,' and 'Dr. Mary’s Monkey' by Edward T. Haslam follows the same eerie vibe—tying JFK’s death to bioweapons labs and monkey viruses. Sounds bonkers, but the connections are weirdly plausible.

Or try 'Family of Secrets' by Russ Baker. It unpacks the Bush family’s ties to the assassination era, mixing politics and crime drama. The pacing’s slower, but the payoff feels like peeling an onion—each layer stings worse.
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