Frontpage
JFK: Remember
Fifty years ago today (22 November), at 19h30 CET, the 35th President of the United States of America, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, was slain in Dallas by assassins who remain unknown to this day. Please, just forget the lone-gunman, Texas School Book Despository, magic-bullet nonsense that the Warren Commission would have had us believe.
Oceans of ink have been spilt analyzing the whos and hows of JFK’s murder (notable accounts include A Heritage of Stone (1970), The Star Spangled Contract (1976, fiction, but based on the JFK assassination), and the best-seller, On The Trail of The Assassins (1988), all by Jim Garrisson), but The Traveling Assassin: Dealey Plaza by author, editor and screenwriter Paul Morris, while also being one of the most extraordinary books you’re likely to read in a long time, asks the far more crucial question – why?
We are quickly introduced to SimRarg, a "traveler" of as-yet indeterminate origin, who finds himself in “a body...that was not half bad, male, medium height, around twenty-five, handsome enough, fit enough; he would do”. Sent by ‘the Engineers’ to Texas, he is tasked with a mission that even he does not understand, one that will change the world forever. November 22, 1963, Dallas, 12.30pm.
Anyway, he has to get one Pa Weathery onside first, and his slutty siren of a daughter, and, well, his chickens too . . . “You can sleep in the barn but if you so much as lay a finger on my daughter or my chickens, it’s your neck I’ll wring.” And there’s just one more little problem; SimRarg is black. Truly, a stranger in a strange land.
It took me a while to determine exactly what cultural buttons Morris’ yarn pushed, then I realized, while I have always been very interested in JFK conspiracy theories, it is (unwittingly?) the old ATV sci-fi series Sapphire and Steel, starring Joanna Lumley and David McCallum, that this seems to take its cue from most, with its titular ‘time detectives’ from another dimension, who are not quite alien but very much more than human, sent to safeguard the structure of time.
SimRarg never seems to be sure exactly what he may or may not be safeguarding, but one thing’s for sure, orders are orders.
This is riveting stuff; Stephen King published his take on the Kennedy assassination, 22.11.63, later in the same year (2011) as this first appeared, but Morris got there first and, as far as bone-dry, believable dialogue, fascinating characterizations and a rattling good yarn were concerned, King did not manage to top it. In addition, the world’s best-selling author (who is in fact this reviewer’s favourite writer, give or take) decided to accept the notion that it was Lee Harvey Oswald who acted alone which, quite frankly, is a bit stupid but, then again, King doesn’t like Kubrick’s version of his novel The Shining, so go figure.
Thankfully, Morris’s finest achievement with his first novel is the ease with which he seamlessly blends startling sci-fi with unflinching social commentary, as he casts a cold eye over the racism and corruption of early 1960s America. And, as for the novel’s take on the ‘conspiracy’ itself goes, ask yourself , how much more incredible is what happens here than what the US public of the time were asked to believe happened? “Mr. President, you can’t say that Dallas doesn’t love you...”
Besides, sources close to this reviewer reveal that sequels are afoot and, really, it couldn’t be any other way – just wait until you find out where our man is heading next, and who his next target is. And why? Well, that would be telling…
There is perhaps the occasional sense that Morris has grown too fond of wrapping the reader up in riddles, and his love of metaphor runs maybe a little too deep, but this is nevertheless a startling debut from an author we can expect a great deal more from. Bring it on, say I.
You can buy The Traveling Assassin on Kindle here, and, while it is now on general release, there's also a special edition of 50 copies that are stamped with a dreadful anniversary date: 22/11/13. You know you want to.
For more information about John Fitzgerald Kennedy’s life and presidency, click here.
Watch footage of JFK’s assassination here.
Share this article:
EU Reporter publishes articles from a variety of outside sources which express a wide range of viewpoints. The positions taken in these articles are not necessarily those of EU Reporter. Please see EU Reporter’s full Terms and Conditions of publication for more information EU Reporter embraces artificial intelligence as a tool to enhance journalistic quality, efficiency, and accessibility, while maintaining strict human editorial oversight, ethical standards, and transparency in all AI-assisted content. Please see EU Reporter’s full A.I. Policy for more information.

