Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

groovedaddy

(6,229 posts)
Mon Apr 16, 2012, 12:20 PM Apr 2012

Robert Caro’s Big Dig - The Life of LBJ

Robert Caro probably knows more about power, political power especially, than anyone who has never had some. He has never run for any sort of office himself and would probably have lost if he had. He’s a shy, soft-spoken man with old–fashioned manners and an old-fashioned New York accent (he says “toime” instead of “time” and “foine” instead of fine), so self-conscious that talking about himself makes him squint a little. The idea of power, or of powerful people, seems to repel him as much as it fascinates. And yet Caro has spent virtually his whole adult life studying power and what can be done with it, first in the case of Robert Moses, the great developer and urban planner, and then in the case of Lyndon Johnson, whose biography he has been writing for close to 40 years. Caro can tell you exactly how Moses heedlessly rammed the Cross Bronx Expressway through a middle-class neighborhood, displacing thousands of families, and exactly how Johnson stole the Texas Senate election of 1948, winning by 87 spurious votes. These stories still fill him with outrage but also with something like wonder, the two emotions that sustain him in what amounts to a solitary, Dickensian occupation with long hours and few holidays.

Caro is the last of the 19th-century biographers, the kind who believe that the life of a great or powerful man deserves not just a slim volume, or even a fat one, but a whole shelf full. He dresses every day in a jacket and tie and reports to a 22nd-floor office in a nondescript building near Columbus Circle, where his neighbors are lawyers or investment firms. His office looks as if it belongs to the kind of C.P.A. who still uses ledgers and a hand-cranked adding machine. There are an old wooden desk, wooden file cabinets and a maroon leather couch that never gets sat on. Here Caro writes the old-fashioned way: in longhand, on large legal pads.

Caro began “The Years of Lyndon Johnson,” his multivolume biography of the 36th president, in 1976, not long after finishing “The Power Broker,” his immense, Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Moses, and figured he could do Johnson’s life in three volumes, which would take him six years or so. Next month, a fourth installment, “The Passage of Power,” will appear 10 years after the last, “Master of the Senate,” which came out 12 years after its predecessor, “Means of Ascent,” which in turn was published 8 years after the first book, “The Path to Power.” These are not ordinary-size volumes, either. “Means of Ascent,” at 500 pages or so, is the comparative shrimp of the bunch. “The Path to Power” is almost 900 pages long; “Master of the Senate” is close to 1,200, or nearly as long as the previous two combined. If you try to read or reread them all in just a couple weeks, as I foolishly did not long ago, you find yourself reluctant to put them down but also worried that your eyeballs may fall out.

The new book, an excerpt of which recently ran in The New Yorker, is 736 pages long and covers only about six years. It begins in 1958, with Johnson, so famously decisive and a man of action, dithering as he decides whether or not to run in the 1960 presidential election. The book then describes his loss to Kennedy on the first ballot at the Democratic convention and takes him through the miserable, humiliating years of his vice presidency before devoting almost half its length to the 47 days between Kennedy’s assassination in November 1963 (Caro’s account, told from Johnson’s point of view, is the most riveting ever) and the State of the Union address the following January — a period during which Johnson seizes the reins of power and, in breathtakingly short order, sets in motion much of the Great Society legislation.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/15/magazine/robert-caros-big-dig.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20120415

9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies

MADem

(135,425 posts)
3. CARO's LBJ tomes are like ice cream! Fantastic, delicious, and cool!!!!
Mon Apr 16, 2012, 01:28 PM
Apr 2012

I loved 'em all, but Master of the Senate is a real eye opener.

And now, even more? I will have to not-be-cheap and BUY this 'un!

SharonAnn

(13,776 posts)
5. "Means of Ascent" was the road map to stealing the 2000 election. I was
Mon Apr 16, 2012, 02:10 PM
Apr 2012

flabbergasted when I read it.

MADem

(135,425 posts)
6. He wasn't the first, and unfortunately, he certainly wasn't the last.
Mon Apr 16, 2012, 02:26 PM
Apr 2012

I think that was on the Ulema's reading list in Iran, too.

bemildred

(90,061 posts)
9. One of the mistakes people make is thinking that what has been happening in this country is new.
Tue Apr 17, 2012, 08:19 AM
Apr 2012

It is not new, it borders on being the norm in this country; the problem is that what worked in the 19th century is distastrous in the 21st. The entire planet is undergoing rapid change, human culture is riding a booster rocket, and these clowns think that the old ways are best. I would not mind if they were only destroying themselves, but the whole planet?

 

hifiguy

(33,688 posts)
4. Can't wait for the fourth volume
Mon Apr 16, 2012, 02:09 PM
Apr 2012

I just reread the first three volumes last fall. Caro is a brilliant and compelling writer and he has a fascinating and larger than life subject in LBJ.

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
7. LBJ...was a Mixed Message Person. I don't think that Caro's Biogs do LBJ justice...
Mon Apr 16, 2012, 08:11 PM
Apr 2012

As a person who lived through his time...he's a bit like Senator Robert Byrd. You would have had to grow up in the South of the USA in THEIR TIME FRAME...to Undestand either one.

History will be re-written...long after they are gone to see both their places in history...from their TIME FRAME and what they ACHIEVED... hoped to achieve and their failures given the political times of their upbringing...and how far they both marched forward in their time frame.


Just saying..

groovedaddy

(6,229 posts)
8. The Civil Rights Act was monumental and LBJ was very aware
Tue Apr 17, 2012, 07:39 AM
Apr 2012

of the cost to the Democratic Party. I think Vietnam finally got to him.

Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Editorials & Other Articles»Robert Caro’s Big Dig - T...