The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York
M**.
Power in America
This is the best non-fiction book I have ever read. Seriously. It is probably the best biography, the best urban history, and the best study of power written in the latter half of the 20th century (though Caro's still-unfinished LBJ saga may top "Broker;" I haven't read those yet).Essentially, for 40+ years Robert Moses was the most powerful man in the entire state of New York. A large portion of his power was derived from his chairmanship of the Triborough Bridge Authority. Typically, a public authority shuts down after its bonds have been repaid and its construction projects have been finished. But Moses, called by Caro "the best bill drafter in Albany," set up the Authority in a way that allowed him to continually issue bonds year after year after year. And since the Constitution states that "No states shall...impair the obligations of contracts," no one could do anything about it. Triborough became a small empire for Moses...at its homebase on Randall's Island, the TBA was the supreme law of the land, and it was enforced by some 200 TBA police officers. Moses often used them to escort his big limousine around NYC and Long Island.One big factor in Moses' power was the press. For four decades he maintained the image of a totally non-political and selfless public servant (he famously refused to take a salary for most of his positions). The sometimes-willful ignorance of the press to Moses' abuses of power is amazing to read. Caro painstakingly documents so many of them.His genius and his impact are absolutely inimitable. Name a major bridge, parkway, expressway, thruway, park, or beach in the New York metropolitan area, Long Island, or New York State, and the MAJORITY of them will have been built by Robert Moses. This was a guy who almost never slept, who swam out into the middle of the ocean alone when he was in his 80s, who fell into absolutely horrifying bouts of rage when someone dared to disagree with him. He may have been one of the greatest abusers of power in recent history but, as Caro says, he "Got Things Done."I loved reading about the absolute control he exercised over various New York mayors, governors, and other officials. He would routinely ignore requests to meet with mayors; if they wanted to meet with Moses, they had to come to him. Every time a new mayor was sworn in, Moses would grab the slips on which mayoral appointments were written and write his own name and position on them. The mayor would then meekly sign it, knowing that he couldn't possibly deny Moses any of those positions.I could say so much more but the other reviewers have already covered the book's strengths. I'll end with this: Moses was one of the most fascinating politicians in the history of this country. But so many have already forgotten him. I hope people will read this book to learn not only about Moses, bu about New York, Washington, and most importantly the use of political power in this country.
L**R
To me he presented a balanced view of the man -- abilities and warts.
I grew up in NYC, Queens in mid1950s to 1973 right by the Throgs Neck Bridge and Alley Pond Park. The long island parkways and Jones Beach were somewhat territorial to me. The familiar locations were interesting and to know some of the background was really nice. Of course my dad would never forgive him for causing the Dodgers to leave Brooklyn, but I suspect there was a lot more to that then just Moses' housing project.VERY WELL Written, easy to read and follow. To me he presented a balanced view of the man -- abilities and warts. I had a hard time putting it down. That this was published and won the Pulitzer while Moses was alive interested me greatly so I read Moses' 19 page response. Just confirms what the author says.Absolutely deserved the Pulitzer.
E**D
A Masterful Biography of a Man and a City
Don't let the 1,000+ pages of Robert Caro's biography of Robert Moses intimidate you. It is immensely entertaining and readable biography, bringing you face to face with one of the most important and least heard of Americans of the 20th Century. Robert Moses' brilliance, arrogance, vision and utter ruthlessness built so much of modern NYC's landscape, that there is perhaps not a single piece of significant modern infrastucture he didn't have a hand in building. As "Parks Commissioner," a position he in essence created via legislation to give him nearly untouchable power which outlasted governors and mayors, he not only built countless parks and returned Central Park to its orginal glory, but created nearly every public beach and park on Long Island and the roadways needed to get New Yorkers to them; most highways, bridges and thoroughfares throughout the city; the UN building, Lincoln Center, Triborough Bridge, Jones Beach, countless public housing projects - the list goes on. You name it, if it was built in NYC in the middle of the 20th Century, Robert Moses was behind it.Caro's incredibly entertaining biography is more than just the profile of the man, but the era and politics he came up in, the changing of the old Tammany guard, and how modern New York was created. You get intimate portrait of a man obsessed with his own power, and brilliant vignettes of how he charmed, bullied, slandered, intimidated, enriched, blackmailed and conned his contemporaries in ways that would make a Mafia don blanche. While borough presidents, ward heelers, mayors and US presidents came and went, Moses remained the consistent face of all that was good about public service in New York, having provided public much of the infrastructure they believed they needed. It was only very late in his long career that New Yorkers started second guessing this icon's decisions, and realized that his obsession with building highways and bridges instead of public transportation, and his indifference if not hostility to working class neighborhoods, created as many problems as his solutions fixed.A fascinating and highly entertaining biography which richly deserved its Pulitzer Prize. This is historical biography at its best.
J**I
Densely Informative and Well Written
The thing that really stands out to me on this book is how beautifully it is written. The words jump off the page.
N**A
history of NY through an outstandig book
It is not easy to read, not only because of the contents but the fonts are so small that you often have to strain your eyes. But it’s worth it!
G**S
It's missing the first 8 pages (possible more)
I'm going to return the book because it's missing the first pages.
F**O
Lectura necesaria
Excelente libro, y calidad de portada y hojas. Muy recomendable.
S**H
Brilliant work on the dynamics of Power
In a peculiar fashion, this magnum opus of a nonfiction is never in any manner less than a fiction. What Mr. Caro does to the characters and events in this book can ever be surpassed in the quality of prose by none but a countable few. The book speaks on the various manifestations of the character of a power wielding human being which have a profound impact on the lives of millions of lesser endowed people in a political setup. The personality of Robert Moses as portrayed in the book will leave the reader with mixed feelings of love and hate for the man who reshaped the way the greatest city in the world looks at present while at the same time trampling the ordinary man under his Commissionership’s powerful juggernaut. Moses grossly violated human rights of thousands of poor people of New York for his great projects but could those monumental works ever have been done without such unstoppable force? Could the works of such magnitude be done with the same kind of administrative Fiat in the modern times? The reader may be left to answer those questions for himself.On 27th October, 2015, Robert A. Caro made a rare appearance onstage at London in a talk moderated by William Hague. In his talk Mr. Caro talked about all the dynamics of power working in civilised democratic societies. Mr. William Hague was very much correct in suggesting the publishers to publish the original work on Robert Moses comprising about 1 mn 50 k words. Readers of the works of Mr. Caro must join together their voices for publication of the original and uncut version of "The Power Broker" as a collector's edition. At least now, the publishers can rest assured of the commercial success of the original unabridged book. It's my earnest request. Mr. Hague may certainly chose to lead our voices.
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