definitely not for her. Jackie was not the kind of person who would punch a clock at a specific hour every day. But maybe Jackie would like a job in the nonprofit sector? Something where you could keep your own hours? At the time, Jackie was being deluged with requests from people asking to lend her name to committees, especially ones involved in preservation, as well as from endorsements, particularly in fashion. To Jackie, most of those requests were about what a cause could get out of her, rather than what she could get out of it.
Years before, in 1964, Dorothy Schiff, the longtime owner and publisher of the New York Post , had met with Jackie in Manhattan. It was one week after the release of the Warren Report, which declared that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in the assassination. Jackie was very emotional with Schiff, her eyes brimming with tears when she explained that she had forgotten to cancel her newspaper and magazine subscriptions that week and had been forced to see the coverage of the report when the shooting was still so fresh.
âThere is only one thing to do,â Schiff told her. âAnd that is to find a substitute in work that is all-absorbing. It will never be the same thing, but you can lose yourself that way.â
Jackie told her that she knew that was true and would like to do it.
âI donât want to be Ambassador to France or Mexico,â she told Schiff. âPresident Johnson said I could have anything I wanted. I would like to work for somebody, but the list is ⦠One is expecting someone to come home every weekend, but no one â¦â
Schiff was sympathetic and admitted that a job was a poor replacement for the void in her life.
âYou know, you are the most famous and admired woman in the world,â Schiff said. âIt is quite a responsibility.â
Being a political wife, that had been her job, a job that left her tired and hoarse at the end of the day. After a pause in her conversation with Schiff, her mind wandered back to the White House.
âAll that furniture â¦â
Before she left, Schiff offered Jackie a job as a columnist.
âYou could just write about things you go to and anything you like,â said Schiff, who had been a columnist herself.
âOh, I canât write,â Jackie said, reflexively reverting to her old-fashioned demure ways. But she also huffed that she had received lots of requests from magazines to write about what one might expectâgracious living or fashionânot about the space race or civil rights or global affairs. After all, she said, her voice growing indignant, âI am interested in the same things Jack was interested in!â 5
As Jackie finally entered the room at the Sulgrave Clubâeleven years after that conversation with Schiff-âBaldrige was struck by how impeccably dressed her friend was and how depressed she looked and sounded. Even her voice was âdrooping.â After settling in and ordering lunch, Baldrige was blunt, as old friends can be.
âYouâre so smart and so bright and youâve hidden all that under a bushel,â Baldrige said. âItâs time to step out with it. Go to work and get a job.â
âWho, meâwork?â Jackie asked. âAnd do what?â
They discussed foundation work but that didnât seem right.
âWell, you care about publishing, youâve been doing things, advising people on their books, you should get a job as a publisher.â 6
Publishing was not the nonprofit world, but it was close. Baldrige, who was in the process of completing a manuscript called Juggling , about balancing work, marriage, and motherhood, suggested her publisher, Viking Press.
âLook,â Baldrige encouraged, âyou know Tommy Guinzburg. Why donât you talk to him?â
Thomas Henry Guinzburg was president of Viking, the distinguished New York publishing house. He had known Jackieâs stepbrother in
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