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The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York
Robert A. Caro

Knopf, 1974 - 1336 pages

average customer review:based on 107 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended






Comprehensive To Say the Least

Robert Caro does an excellent job detailing the life and work of Robert Moses. He gives the reader such a detailed account of the impact Robert Moses had on the New York metropolitan area that one actually is introduced to dozens of worthwhile "mini-biographies" within this book of 1162 pages. He gives an excellent description of a multitude of mayors, governors and other politicians, statesmen, and businessmen that Caro's description of these individuals are sometimes more comprehensive than their own biographies.

Caro is comprehensive without resorting to gossip, inuendo and unsubstantiated claims. The Power Broker chronicles Moses'early life as an idealistic but abrasive reformer who is brought under the wing of Governor Al Smith and staff. A significant part of his rise to power should be credited to Governor Smith who has complete trust in Moses and other aides regardless of public criticisms affecting his administration. Smith was absolutely loyal to Moses and supported his endeavors as it related to the fruition of his dreams involving building parks and highways.

Moses gained a great deal of power as the years progressed and became less of an idealist and more of a pragmatic politician who as the steward millions of dollars in city, state, and federal funds for housing, parks, highways, and bridges created a system by which many sectors of society depended on him for jobs, contracts, and political patronage. Unions, politicians, contractors, developers all benefited from Robert Moses.

When picking up this book, I asked myself why the " Fall of NY" portion of the title. If you read the book you will understand that contrary to modern day urban planning, many of Moses' projects were more about his accomplishments than the people adversely affected by the projects. Whether it is the construction of Lincoln Center, the Cross Bronx Expressway, the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, the reader will see that no mechanism existed to balance the needs of building with the long term social ills that massive construction projects can create.

For anyone who has spent any amount of time in New York City or its surrounding suburbs, many questions are answered by reading this book. Many of these questions have to do with transportation and urban/suburban planning. Caro is highly critical of Moses as were many people during the end of his reign in the late 1960's, but he manages to be objective enough to give credit where credit is due. A book of this magnitude can only reach 1162 pages by being objective .

I higly recommend this book, it is by far the best biography I have read thus far and is told in its proper historical context. Rober Caro did an admirable job in telling the story of a giant of a man who was vehemently loved and vehemently hated by many.




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In A Word...

Heavy









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Robert Moses demonized at length

Driving through New York City, I've always been astonished by the immense scale and innovative engineering behind the bridges, tunnels and highways connecting the city's boroughs. Caro does a tremendous job of discussing how Robert Moses managed to build many of these structures by using a variety of devious means, ranging from political tactics short of blackmail to manipulation of the public through the media.

Caro's Robert Moses is an evil man who did everything within his power to achieve his means no matter the cost. Moses is depicted as an overbearing man who is not only arrogant and greedy, but unsympathetic to the poor and his own family. In the final chapters as Mose's began to lose his power and, to a certain degree, get a taste of his own medicine, I could not help feel a certain sense of satisfaction.

I had to constantly remind myself of Caro's bias. Despite Caro explicitly saying otherwise, this book has the clear implication that Robert Moses destroyed New York--its neighborhoods and people. Moses is demonized at length to an extreme and perhaps somewhat unjustifiably. If you read other material about Moses written before Caro released his book, you find all but praise for Moses, a venerable man in most respects. What Caro should have emphasized more in his book is what happened to New York was not only because of Moses, but due to a variety of social, cultural and political factors reaching far beyond Moses. Similar chaos and destruction took place in other cities where Moses never showed his face.


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Can a political biography get any better?

This mountain of a book gives the man and his time, the latter amply. It is a history of New York in the 20th century. Details are overwhelming. On some subjects you get more details than you ever wanted. And yet the writing is sharp, elegant, often witty.
I never heard of this man Moses before I found the book on the list of the best 100 non-fiction books. I knew the name of the author because of his LBJ bios, but Robert Moses meant nothing to me. He still is not all that important or interesting as a person, but he is the carrier of many sub-plots: the mini-bios of people like Al Smith; the treatises on the ways of democracy (can it really be true that all other systems are even worse? a despairing thought, sometimes); the theories on public service, public works, public corruption (rarely described clearer); the lessons on law making and electioneering; the inside of party machines. Should we really be quite so certain that we know how the world must be run?
Moses serves as a looking glass on other politicians.
Fascinating the trench warfare with FDR. I find it really hard to understand how FDR could become such a dominating figure in US politics for so long. Hardly anybody seems to have anything good to say about that man nowadays, his character, abilities, and even policies. Certainly not Caro. All other references to him that I recall (e.g. in McCullough's Truman, in Vidal's Washington, in Tuchman's Stilwell, in Hofstadter's American Political Traditions) are equally belittling. How did FDR do it? His main strength seems to have been his enormous skill at political survival. There must have been more.
Almost as interesting is the mentor/follower relationship with Al Smith. How does a close political alliance survive so many disturbances, turbulences, conflicts, contradictions? Homo politicus is obviously not only a simple vote counter. There must be more. Caro stays away from simplistic explanations.
While the relationship with FDR was pure hate and the one with Al Smith pure friendship, the most complex relationship seems to have been the one with La Guardia, whom Caro likes to call Little Flower (Fiorello). That was a true off and on symbiosis of mutual benefit, a mixture of admiration and contempt. Very lively and a centre piece of the story.
The man Moses: the man who built most of New York's parks, bridges, roads; a visionary with a knack for implementation; a tyrant for his staff, a brillant go-getter without scruples, a genius at manipulating politicians, a sick egomaniac; in other words, a typical boss from hell. I have known some of those.
True to character, he even seems to have invented McCarthyism, already during the 30s.


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A Humane Story of New York

The length of this book is not an issue. It's unapologetic approach to a complex man (Moses) and a complex city are both incredibly enlightening and heart-wrenchingly real. A beautiful book.


reviews: 1, 2, 3, 4, page 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14



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