Confused about the genre of the book
I was interested in the show because when I was in junior high in Bethesda, I met some kids who had gone to school with Candy Carpenter. I like the show a lot, so I am now reading the book. I was amazed how faithful to the book the TV show is! There are scenes in the TV show straight from the book. I also believed the book was non-fiction, and that what was written in it must have really happened.
People have commented they were disturbed by the cookout the day JFK died. I posted that yes, it seems odd to us, but it really happened! It is on the bottom of p. 120 in the book, right down to the men wheeling their grills down the sidewalk.
A couple weeks ago, Mrs. Carpenter was quoted by the Washington Post saying “Every segment of the show is fiction! Every segment!” As I got further into the book, I noticed Lily Koppel was actually writing the way a fiction writer does, telling what a character feels, thinks, and says. She interviewed many of the wives (definitely not Rene, though), but there is no way elderly women are going to remember details of what they wore and said from 50+ years ago, let alone remember those details about the other wives who were not interviewed.
Kris Stoever, Rene and Scott’s daughter, who is depicted as a child on the show, live-tweeted during an episode that the “impromptu picnic” the day JFK died never happened. She said everyone was home watching the news coverage of it. She also said Rene had to turn in three manuscripts to her would-be editor, not the twenty noted in the book.
I still am enjoying both the show and the book. But the book is historical fiction. “True story” really is an oxymoron, isn’t it? A “story” is a tale that is not necessarily true.