December 12, 2012
Bill O'Reilly's goal is to make the past come alive
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The teens shift uncomfortably in their cramped wooden desks. Most are bored and hope the teacher will just get on with the lesson so they can get home already.

Bill O'Reilly, fresh out of Marist College and, at 21, barely older than the faces staring blankly his way, stands inside a classroom at Monsignor Edward Pace High School in 1970 and realizes he has a challenge, how to teach history to a preoccupied audience and make it interesting.

O'Reilly's revelation: bring the historical characters alive as real people.

"The kids were not motivated, so I did it in a way that was fun," says the host of Fox News' top-rated "The O'Reilly Factor," from his office in New York City. In just a few hours he tapes that day's "O'Reilly Factor," a news commentary program that routinely trounces the cable competition.

O'Reilly, 63, commands attention. Some would say the former Catholic-school boy is a firebrand for his predominantly conservative political views. Some would offer descriptions that are more unkind. For O'Reilly, everything started back in that Monsignor Pace classroom in Opa-locka, Fla., 40-plus years ago.

"I got the blood and gore out there, and the personality profiles of who they were," O'Reilly says of his approach to teaching history. "I made them real people so, in the back of my mind, that was a way to get people involved. When I became an author and did successful books on contemporary problems on what was happening in the country, to the dismay of my publisher, I said I was going into history books, and I used the same techniques I used in the classroom in Pace. I was fortunate to find Martin Dugard, a brilliant historian." Their biographies, he says, are "fun to read."

Indeed, their two history books, "Killing Kennedy: The End of Camelot" (Holt, $28) and last year's "Killing Lincoln: The Shocking Assassination That Changed America Forever," crackle with the tension of a brisk James Bond thriller. Yet they aren't novels, a point O'Reilly wishes to enforce.

"Some people get confused, but these are nonfiction books and they are well researched," he says. "These are not Gore Vidal."

This week, both books are performing like the latest bestsellers from John Grisham or J.K. Rowling. "Killing Kennedy" is No. 1 in its ninth week atop the New York Times bestsellers list; "Killing Lincoln" sits at No. 3 in its 62nd week.

O'Reilly's style is not the norm for historians, says Florida International University history professor Darden Pyron, author of biographies on "Gone With the Wind" scribe Margaret Mitchell and musician Liberace.

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