In 1967, Kearns went to Washington, D.C., as a
White House Fellow during the
Lyndon B. Johnson administration. Johnson initially expressed interest in hiring the young intern as his Oval Office assistant, but after an article by Kearns appeared in
The New Republic laying out a scenario for Johnson's removal from office over his conduct of the
war in Vietnam, she was, instead, assigned to the Department of Labor; Goodwin has written that she felt relieved to be able to remain in the internship program in any capacity at all. "The president discovered that I had been actively involved in the anti-Vietnam War movement and had written an article entitled, 'How to Dump Lyndon Johnson'. I thought, for sure, he would kick me out of the program, but instead, he said, 'Oh, bring her down here for a year, and if I can't win her over, no one can'." After Johnson decided not to run for reelection, he brought Kearns to the White House as a member of his staff, where she focused on domestic anti-poverty efforts. After Johnson left office in 1969, Kearns taught government at
Harvard for ten years, including a course on the American presidency. Harvard controversially denied her tenure. The Government Department recommended her for tenure and an ad hoc committee approved her tenure case, but Harvard University President
Derek Bok rejected the tenure case. During her period at Harvard, she also assisted Johnson in drafting his memoirs. Her first book,
Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream, a biography which drew upon her conversations with the late president, was published in 1977, becoming a
New York Times bestseller and provided a launching pad for her literary career. A sports journalist as well, Goodwin was the first woman to enter the
Boston Red Sox locker room in 1979. She consulted on and appeared in
Ken Burns' 1994 documentary
Baseball. Goodwin won the 1995
Pulitzer Prize for History for
No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front During World War II. In 1996, Goodwin received the Golden Plate Award of the
American Academy of Achievement. Goodwin received an honorary
L.H.D. from
Bates College in 1998. She was awarded an honorary doctorate from
Westfield State College in 2008. Goodwin was on air talking to
Tom Brokaw of
NBC News during their
2000 Presidential election night coverage, when Brokaw announced NBC's projection that the state of
Florida had voted for
George W. Bush, thus making him president. Goodwin won the 2006
Lincoln Prize (for the best book about the
American Civil War) for
Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln, a book about
Abraham Lincoln's
presidential cabinet. Part of the book was adapted by
Tony Kushner into the screenplay for
Steven Spielberg's 2012 film
Lincoln. She was a member of the
Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission advisory board. The book also won the inaugural
American History Book Prize given by the
New-York Historical Society. In 2006, Goodwin received The Lincoln Forum's
Richard Nelson Current Award of Achievement. Goodwin was a member of the board of directors of
Northwest Airlines. Goodwin is a frequent guest commentator on
Meet the Press, having appeared many times during the tenures of hosts
Tim Russert,
Tom Brokaw,
David Gregory, and
Chuck Todd. She was also a regular guest on
Charlie Rose, appearing a total of forty-eight times beginning in 1994.
Stephen King met with Goodwin while he was writing his novel
11/22/63, since she had been an assistant to Johnson. King used some of her ideas in the novel on what a worst-case scenario would be like if history had changed. In 2014, Kearns won the
Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction for
The Bully Pulpit. It was also a
Los Angeles Times Book Prize finalist (History, 2013) and was named one of the
Christian Science Monitor 15 best nonfiction books in 2013. In 2016, she appeared, as herself, in the
fifth episode of
American Horror Story: Roanoke, and she made a cameo appearance playing herself as a teacher in the
Simpsons episode "
The Town". In April 2024, Simon & Schuster published Kearns' book,
An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s. ==Plagiarism controversies==