The Bridge at Chappaquiddick Audiobook By Jack Olsen cover art

The Bridge at Chappaquiddick

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The Bridge at Chappaquiddick

By: Jack Olsen
Narrated by: Kevin Sidenstricker
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About this listen

And on its surface, the Chappaquiddick Incident (as it has infamously become known) was a simple but tragic traffic accident. However, its political fallout caused it to become the most speculated-upon car accident until Princess Diana's fatal ride, some 28 years later: Was Kennedy drunk? Was he trying to conceal an affair by deliberately killing Kopechne? Why did he wait for so long before reporting the accident? And who else was involved?

Olsen tells the tale with as much detail as was made available to him. Though there is apparently only a single living eye-witness to the accident (Kennedy himself, who described having the "sensation of drowning" on live television a week later), Olsen tracks down the incongruous statements made by others who were indirectly involved and comes to a potential conclusion which would be difficult to refute. There is no legal evidence of this conclusion, of course, but his alternate explanation of events turns much of the circumstantial evidence into a logic-of-sorts. And his presentation thereof causes one to reflect seriously on the nature of the official record of events as told through Kennedy's lips.

©2014 Jack Olsen (P)2015 Gregg Olsen
History & Theory True Crime United States Thought-Provoking
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What listeners say about The Bridge at Chappaquiddick

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    4 out of 5 stars
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BRIDGE TO POSSIBLE UNDERSTANDING

I found this book to be much more engaging than did some reviewers. I had lived during the Chappaquiddick bridge incident. As I listened to Jack Olsen's account, I learned new details and was reminded of facts I had forgotten. I found the narrative engaging and easy to understand. I feel that the book is well balanced and well researched. I especially liked the conjecture (at the end) of the author as to the truth of what had happened. His speculation makes great sense, however since the death of Ted Kennedy, it is unlikely to be acknowledged, even if true.

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8 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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meh...

Finished the book simply because I had nothing better to do. Story and narrator leave something to be desired.

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2 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Worth The Listen

I enjoyed this story so much that I listen to it twice. Fair, honest, and interesting.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Not Olsen's Best Work

I've read several of Olsen's books and have greatly enjoyed them. This one was a big disappointment.

I didn't know a ton about the incident before reading, just a high-level overview of what happened. The setup and background before getting to the incident were extremely long (a couple hours plus, if I recall correctly). Even once the incident occurred, it never did become the gripping story I was expecting. A lot of it was pretty boring and I nearly turned it back in for a refund multiple times. I wanted to finish it, though, because I was sure Olsen would redeem himself somehow. He didn't.

Nothing new was really presented or new angle raised. It mainly read like a history of the Kennedys and the political/legal maneuvering that surrounded the incident. I was left with many unanswered questions about the incident itself, as well as the question of what the author's intent was when writing the book.

One of the few interesting parts was the last one, where various questions were raised about the official version of events. I would've liked to know more about this and have more in-depth answers given. It was treated almost as an afterthought. One really intriguing possibility was raised about what might have happened that night, but it is given a brief mention and never touched upon again.

Overall, I would not recommend. Also, the narrator has an odd way of pausing in unusual places at times or speaking with an odd cadence that was often really off-putting.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Pretty ordinary depiction of the tragedy.

The book was very interesting, but it seemed a pretty ordinary depiction of the tragedy. There was not much explanation or detail of how long the medical examiners thoughts MJK could have lived if help had been called and seemed to gloss over that. I'd recommend the book for general interest, but it was underwhelming. I also thought the narration was less than stellar.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Interesting Take on an Old Mystery

Jack Olsen examines the circumstances surrounding the incident that undoubtedly ended Ted Kennedy's run for the White House just as he was putting on his track shoes.
Olsen provides thoughtful, reasonable speculation on the events that led to the drowning death of Mary Jo Kopechne, suggesting an explanation that is far less salacious than any of the wild theories that abounded at the time.
The narrator's frequent mispronunciation of ordinary words such as "similar", (not "simular") is a sizeable distraction. And leave the accent to the natives.

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Ignore the negative reviews....

of "Bor-ing!" and that the book is largely speculation. It certainly is NOT boring. It is just that many readers now need a mutilated female corpse doused in body fluids to be entertained by true crime. You won't get that with Olsen. What you will get is thoughtful investigation and insight. And as to speculation: what else can one do in this case? But there is empty speculation, and there is speculation that might led to a break in a case. Olsen's is the latter sort. Give this book a chance, and disengage your need for gore, and you will discover a new take on an old murder.

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16 people found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Chappaquidick

The story is well known. Thought there'd be new information about what really happened. Disappointed.

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    1 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

Not a true crime book

This book, though a crime that went unpunished isn't written or told as a crime book. you'll learn quite a bit about Martha Vineyard you'll learn about the Kennedy boys and how they love to party and how people felt about them but very little is told about the True Crime very disappointed in this book I shall return it.

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    2 out of 5 stars
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BOR-ING!

This book wasn’t for you, but who do you think might enjoy it more?

Maybe, MAYBE someone who has never learned anything about the Kennedys, and who is extremely easy to entertain. I mean extremely easy. But it is not a sure thing that there is such a reader/listener.

Would you ever listen to anything by Jack Olsen again?

Jack Olsen is right at the top of my fave authors. BUT....

Would you be willing to try another one of Kevin Sidenstricker’s performances?

The narrator is OK. I've heard better, I've heard worse. Rather boringly read... sing-song. But in his defense, sing-song is the flavor of what he is reading.

What reaction did this book spark in you? Anger, sadness, disappointment?

Major disappointment.

Any additional comments?

I am only 3 hours into this audiobook, and I am having major difficulty sticking with it. I have already given it up twice, due to terminal boredom, but then went back to it thinking maybe I haven't given it a fair trial yet. I am still in that stage.

But this is the absolute BORINGEST writing I have encountered yet, as far as Kennedy doings are concerned! There is always something fascinating about the lives and doings of any of Teddy's generation of Kennedys, but this book either hasn't happened on anything or else, and I think this is more likely the case, the book is written in such a bland, saccharine manner that anything remotely interesting has been sanitized and bleached out so much that the reader is left with a bunch of fluff that is next to impossible to stick with.

Let's face it - we all have learned so much about the various members of this family - maybe we already know too much to digest this cotton candy, which I believe is one of the earlier books on the Kennedys. Maybe at the time Olsen wrote this book, we were still in the stage of just not dealing with celebrities in their full humanity. You had to be polite and not expose bad things. Just guessing what would be the reason for writing such a deadly quiet book about such fascinating people. For example, the well known skirt chasing carried on by the Kennedy brothers is touched on in this book in the cutest, lightest, non-judgmental manner imaginable, as if this penchant is just some harmless personality tendency. Not necessarily related to adultery, lying, etc., - the REAL seamy side of such things. It doesn't come out and say that anything untoward ever happened. Just "flirtation", etc. That was a major tipoff to me that maybe this book never was going to get interesting - never going to delve any deeper into the whole bridge incident, either.

But mind you, I am NOT looking for scandalous stuff, not at all. All that has been thoroughly aired elsewhere by now. I am just looking for indications that this writing is based on the well researched facts of reality that characterizes Olsen's many excellent true crime books. It has certainly been a rude awakening that this book is so opposite to that.

Actually, my disappointment is really my fault for not thoroughly reading the reviews before buying it. If I had given proper attention to the ultimate finding of the book that probably, Teddy wasn't even in the car that fell off the bridge at all, I probably would have suspected that the whole book was going to be just this pretty, watercolor portrait (with very dilute colors) and that would be all I was going to get. But again, there is ALWAYS something fascinating to be learned about this amazing family, and most of us of a certain age probably harbor remnants of a curiosity about what actually did happen during this incident....so I took the plunge.

So, I am SLOGGING through these horribly hollow, bland, non-informative chapters, but I cannot be sure I will ever reach the end of the book. I am already shopping for something that might hold interest better. I won't return this because I think it is my own fault for falling for the title and not giving due diligence before getting this book.Sorry for taking so many words to say what maybe I should have left expressed in one word - BORING!. I am not known for an economy of words. I'm working on that...

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5 people found this helpful