Born into one of America's wealthiest and most distinguished families, John ("Jock") Hay Whitney (1904-1982) spent his childhood in an Italian Renaissance town house on New York's Fifth Avenue, in Westbury, Long Island and Greentree, South Carolina. Groton, the prestigious prep school, transformed the pudgy, awkward, stuttering young boy with a penchant for day-dreaming into an accomplished young man with direction, who went on to study at Yale and Oxford.
"Mr. Kahn covers, apparently in full, the life of Mr. Whitney. It is by writing down the ascertainable that the picture of his personality an intelligent, concerned man with a talent for bringing together those who are poles apart emerges... Each sentence, with style and sophistication, pushes forward the narrative with an offering of new information, laced at times with witty comment. There are no unanswered questions... [A] wholly absorbing... story of an unusual life." Richard F. Shepard, New York Times
"In relating Whitney's always-interesting story and in setting it in the texture of the times, Kahn writes with awe. In fact, there are times when he is irreverent. That is all to the good, but his Whitney is a thoroughly credible person, a genuinely well-mannered and nice person, who has wanted to do well whatever he started out to accomplish. He's a delight to meet." Alden Whitman, Boston Globe
"Kahn's New Yorker style, richly anecdotal and detailed... does justice to this highly likable millionaire sportsman, diplomat, newspaper publisher, stage and Hollywood angel and Maecenas, who played all these roles with zest and imagination... A delightful tribute to a man who 'epitomized, in a world of increasing egalitarianism, the vanishing patrician.'" Publishers Weekly