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The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York Paperback – July 12, 1975
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One of the Modern Library’s hundred greatest books of the twentieth century, Robert Caro's monumental book makes public what few outsiders knew: that Robert Moses was the single most powerful man of his time in the City and in the State of New York. And in telling the Moses story, Caro both opens up to an unprecedented degree the way in which politics really happens—the way things really get done in America's City Halls and Statehouses—and brings to light a bonanza of vital information about such national figures as Alfred E. Smith and Franklin D. Roosevelt (and the genesis of their blood feud), about Fiorello La Guardia, John V. Lindsay and Nelson Rockefeller.
But The Power Broker is first and foremost a brilliant multidimensional portrait of a man—an extraordinary man who, denied power within the normal framework of the democratic process, stepped outside that framework to grasp power sufficient to shape a great city and to hold sway over the very texture of millions of lives. We see how Moses began: the handsome, intellectual young heir to the world of Our Crowd, an idealist. How, rebuffed by the entrenched political establishment, he fought for the power to accomplish his ideals. How he first created a miraculous flowering of parks and parkways, playlands and beaches—and then ultimately brought down on the city the smog-choked aridity of our urban landscape, the endless miles of (never sufficient) highway, the hopeless sprawl of Long Island, the massive failures of public housing, and countless other barriers to humane living. How, inevitably, the accumulation of power became an end in itself.
Moses built an empire and lived like an emperor. He was held in fear—his dossiers could disgorge the dark secret of anyone who opposed him. He was, he claimed, above politics, above deals; and through decade after decade, the newspapers and the public believed. Meanwhile, he was developing his public authorities into a fourth branch of government known as "Triborough"—a government whose records were closed to the public, whose policies and plans were decided not by voters or elected officials but solely by Moses—an immense economic force directing pressure on labor unions, on banks, on all the city's political and economic institutions, and on the press, and on the Church. He doled out millions of dollars' worth of legal fees, insurance commissions, lucrative contracts on the basis of who could best pay him back in the only coin he coveted: power. He dominated the politics and politicians of his time—without ever having been elected to any office. He was, in essence, above our democratic system.
Robert Moses held power in the state for 44 years, through the governorships of Smith, Roosevelt, Lehman, Dewey, Harriman and Rockefeller, and in the city for 34 years, through the mayoralties of La Guardia, O'Dwyer, Impellitteri, Wagner and Lindsay, He personally conceived and carried through public works costing 27 billion dollars—he was undoubtedly America's greatest builder.
This is how he built and dominated New York—before, finally, he was stripped of his reputation (by the press) and his power (by Nelson Rockefeller). But his work, and his will, had been done.
- Print length1344 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVintage
- Publication dateJuly 12, 1975
- Dimensions6.19 x 1.89 x 9.19 inches
- ISBN-100394720245
- ISBN-13978-0394720241
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From the Publisher
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Surely the greatest book ever written about a city." —David Halberstam, Pulitzer–Prize winning journalist and author of The Best and the Brightest
“A literary masterpiece.” —The New York Times
“Groundbreaking…the most important and complete explanation of how cities are formed, neighborhoods are destroyed, bridges erected, roads laid down, parks designed, fortunes made, lives ruined, and power is amassed.” —99% Invisible
"I think about Robert Caro and reading The Power Broker back when I was twenty-two years old and just being mesmerized, and I'm sure it helped to shape how I think about politics." —President Barack Obama
"The most absorbing, detailed, instructive, provocative book ever published about the making and raping of modern New York City and environs and the man who did it, about the hidden plumbing of New York City and State politics over the last half-century, about the force of personality and the nature of political power in a democracy. A monumental work, a political biography and political history of the first magnitude." —Eliot Fremont-Smith, New York
"One of the most exciting, un-put-downable books I have ever read. This is definitive biography, urban history, and investigative journalism. This is a study of the corruption which power exerts on those who wield it to set beside Tacitus and his emperors, Shakespeare and his kings." —Daniel Berger, Baltimore Evening Sun
"Simply one of the best nonfiction books in English of the past 40 years . . . There has probably never been a better dissection of political power . . . From the first page . . . you know that you are in the hands of a master . . . Riveting . . . Superb . . . Not just a stunning portrait of perhaps the most influential builder in world history . . . but an object lesson in the dangers of power. Every politician should read it." —Dominic Sandbrook, The Sunday Times
"A study of municipal power that will change the way any reader of the book hereafter peruses his newspaper." —Philip Herrera, Time
"A triumph, brilliant and totally fascinating. A majestic, even Shakespearean, drama about the interplay of power and personality." —Justin Kaplan
"In the future, the scholar who writes the history of American cities in the twentieth century will doubtless begin with this extraordinary effort." —Richard C. Wade, The New York Times Book Review
"The feverish hype that dominates the merchandising of arts and letters in America has so debased the language that, when a truly exceptional achievement comes along, there are no words left to praise it. Important, awesome, compelling--these no longer summon the full flourish of trumpets this book deserves. It is extraordinary on many levels and certain to endure." —William Greider, The Washington Post Book World
"A modern Machiavelli's Prince." —The Guardian
"One of the great biographies of all time . . . [by] one of the great reporters of our time . . . and probably the greatest biographer. He is also an extraordinary writer. After reading page 136 of his book The Power Broker, I gasped and read it again, then again. This, I thought, is how it should be done . . . One of the greatest nonfiction works ever written . . . Every MP, wonk and would-be wonk in Westminster has read [Robert Caro's The Years of Lyndon Johnson], because they think it is the greatest insight into power ever written. They're nearly right: it's the second greatest after The Power Broker." —Bryan Appleyard, The Sunday Times
"Apart from the book's being so good as biography, as city history, as sheer good reading, The Power Broker is an immense public service." —Jane Jacobs
"Required reading for all those who hope to make their way in urban politics; for the reformer, the planner, the politician and even the ward heeler." —Jules L. Wagman, Cleveland Press
"An extraordinary study of the workings of power, individually, institutionally, politically, and economically in our republic." —Edmund Fuller, The Wall Street Journal
"Caro has written one of the finest, best-researched and most analytically informative descriptions of our political and governmental processes to appear in a generation." —Nicholas Von Hoffman, The Washington Post
"This is irresistibly readable, an outright masterpiece and unparalleled insight into how power works and perhaps the greatest portrait ever of a world city." —David Sexton, The Evening Standard
"Caro's achievement is staggering. The most unlikely subjects--banking, ward politics, construction, traffic management, state financing, insurance companies, labor unions, bridge building--become alive and contemporary. It is cheap at the price and too short by half. A milestone in literary and publishing history." —Donald R. Morris, The Houston Post
"A masterpiece of American reporting. It's more than the story of a tragic figure or the exploration of the unknown politics of our time. It's an elegantly written and enthralling work of art." —Theodore H. White
"A stupendous achievement . . . Caro's style is gripping, indeed hypnotic, and he squeezes every ounce of drama from his remarkable story . . . Can a democracy combine visionary leadership with effective checks and balances to contain the misuse of power? No book illustrates this fundamental dilemma of democracy better than The Power Broker . . . Indeed, no student of government can regard his education as complete until he has read it." —Vernon Bogdanor, The Independent
"Irresistible reading. It is like one of the great Russian novels, overflowing with characters and incidents that all fit into a vast mosaic of plot and counterplot. Only this is no novel. This is a college education in power corruption." —George McCue, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
From the Inside Flap
In revealing how Moses did it--how he developed his public authorities into a political machine that was virtually a fourth branch of government, one that could bring to their knees Governors and Mayors (from La Guardia to Lindsay) by mobilizing banks, contractors, labor unions, insurance firms, even the press and the Church, into an irresistible economic force--Robert Caro reveals how power works in all the cities of the United States. Moses built an empire and lived like an emperor. He personally conceived and completed public works costing 27 billion dollars--the greatest builder America (and probably the world) has ever known. Without ever having been elected to office, he dominated the men who were--even his most bitter enemy, Franklin D. Roosevelt, could not control him--until he finally encountered, in Nelson Rockefeller, the only man whose power (and ruthlessness in wielding it) equalled his own.
From the Back Cover
About the Author
Caro’s first book, The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York, everywhere acclaimed as a modern classic, was chosen by the Modern Library as one of the hundred greatest nonfiction books of the twentieth century. It is, according to David Halberstam, “Surely the greatest book ever written about a city.” And The New York Times Book Review said: “In the future, the scholar who writes the history of American cities in the twentieth century will doubtless begin with this extraordinary effort.”
The first volume of The Years of Lyndon Johnson, The Path to Power, was cited by The Washington Post as “proof that we live in a great age of biography . . . [a book] of radiant excellence . . . Caro’s evocation of the Texas Hill Country, his elaboration of Johnson’s unsleeping ambition, his understanding of how politics actually work, are—let it be said flat out—at the summit of American historical writing.” Professor Henry F. Graff of Columbia University called the second volume, Means of Ascent, “brilliant. No review does justice to the drama of the story Caro is telling, which is nothing less than how present-day politics was born.” The London Times hailed volume three, Master of the Senate, as “a masterpiece . . . Robert Caro has written one of the truly great political biographies of the modern age.” The Passage of Power, volume four, has been called “Shakespearean . . . A breathtakingly dramatic story [told] with consummate artistry and ardor” (The New York Times) and “as absorbing as a political thriller . . . By writing the best presidential biography the country has ever seen, Caro has forever changed the way we think about, and read, American history” (NPR). On the cover of The New York Times Book Review, President Bill Clinton praised it as “Brilliant . . . Important . . . Remarkable. With this fascinating and meticulous account Robert Caro has once again done America a great service.”
“Caro has a unique place among American political biographers,” The Boston Globe said . . . “He has become, in many ways, the standard by which his fellows are measured.” And Nicholas von Hoffman wrote: “Caro has changed the art of political biography.”
Born and raised in New York City, Caro graduated from Princeton University, was later a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University, and worked for six years as an investigative reporter for Newsday. He lives in New York City with his wife, Ina, the historian and writer.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Wait Until the Evening
“One must wait until the evening
To see how splendid the day has been.”
—SOPHOCLES
As THE CAPTAIN of the Yale swimming team stood beside the pool, still dripping after his laps, and listened to Bob Moses, the team's second-best freestyler, he didn't know what shocked him more—the suggestion or the fact that it was Moses who was making it.
Ed Richards knew that Moses was brilliant—even "Five A" Johnson, who regularly received the top grade in every course he took each term, said that Moses could have stood first in the Class of 1909 if he hadn't spent so much time reading books that had nothing to do with his assignments—but the quality that had most impressed Richards and the rest of '09 was his idealism. The poems that the olive-skinned, big-eyed Jew from New York wrote for the Yale literary magazines, sitting up late at night, his bedroom door closed against the noise from the horseplay in the dormitory, were about Beauty and Truth. When the bull sessions got around, as they did so often, now that the Class was in its senior year, to the subject of careers, Moses was always talking—quite movingly, too—about dedicating his life to public service, to helping the lower classes. And just the other evening, in the midst of a desultory discussion about which fraternity's nominee should be elected class treasurer, Moses had jumped to his feet and argued so earnestly that class officers should be chosen on merit rather than fraternity affiliation, that the criterion shouldn't be who a man's friends were but what he could do, that Johnson had said to Richards afterwards, "I feel as if I've had an awakening tonight." And now, Richards realized, this same Bob Moses was suggesting that they get money for the swimming team by deliberately misleading Og Reid.
Ogden Mills Reid was the best thing that had ever happened to swimming at Yale. Since the legendary Walter Camp, athletic director as well as football coach, was hoarding the football receipts for a new stadium, there was no money to replace the dank, low-ceilinged pool, which wasn't even the right length for intercollegiate swimming events. There was no allocation from the university for travel expenses or even for a coach. But Reid, who had been Yale's first great swimmer, not only paid the team's expenses but, week after week, traveled up to New Haven from New York to do the coaching himself. This year, after a long fight, Moses had succeeded in organizing the wrestling, fencing, hockey, basketball and swimming teams into a "Minor Sports Association" which would conduct a general fund-raising effort and divide the money among the teams, in the hope that the existence of such a formal organization would coax new contributions from alumni. The theory was good, Richards had thought at the time, but there was one hitch: any money contributed specifically to one of the teams also had to go into the general fund. Richards doubted that Reid, who was interested only in swimming, would want to contribute to a general fund and he wondered if the swimmers might not end up with even less money than before. But Moses had seemed to have no fears on that score. And now, standing beside the pool, Richards was beginning to understand why. Moses, dressed in suit, vest and a high collar that was wilting in the dampness, had just announced that he was skipping practice to go to New York and see Reid, and when Richards had expressed his doubts that the alumnus would contribute, Moses had smiled and said, "Oh, that's all right. I just won't tell him it's going to an association. He'll think it's the regular contribution to the swimming team."
Now Richards said slowly, "I think that's a little bit tricky, Bob. I think that's a little bit smooth. I don't like that at all."
With astonishing rapidity, the face over the high collar turned pale, almost white. Moses' fists came up for a moment before he lowered them. "Well, you've got nothing to say about it," he said.
"Yes, I do," Richards said. "I'm the captain. I'm responsible. And I'm telling you not to do it."
"Well, I'm going to do it anyway," Moses said.
"If you do," Richards said, "I'll go to Og and tell him that the money isn't going where he thinks it is."
Moses' voice suddenly dropped. His tone was threatening. "If you don't let me do it," he said, "I'm going to resign from the team."
He thought he was bluffing me, Richards would recall later. He thought I wouldn't let him resign. "Well, Bob," Richards said, "your resignation is accepted."
Bob Moses turned and walked out of the pool. He never swam for Yale again.
Forty-five years later, a new mayor of New York was being sworn in at City Hall. Under huge cut-glass chandeliers Robert F. Wagner, Jr., took the oath of office and then, before hundreds of spectators, personally administered the oath, and handed the coveted official appointment blanks, to his top appointees.
But to a handful of the spectators, the real significance of the ceremony was in an oath not given. When Robert Moses came forward, Wagner swore him in as City Park Commissioner and as City Construction Coordinator—and then, with Moses still waiting expectantly, stopped and beckoned forward the next appointee.
To those spectators, Wagner's gesture signaled triumph. They were representatives of the so-called "Good Government" organizations of the city: the Citizens Union, the City Club, liberal elements of the labor movement. They had long chafed at the power that Moses had held under previous mayors as Park Commissioner, Construction Coordinator and member of the City Planning Commission. They had determined to try to curb his sway under Wagner and they had decided to make the test of strength the Planning Commission membership. This, they had decided after long analysis and debate, was Moses' weak point: As Park Commissioner and Construction Coordinator he proposed public works projects, and the City Charter had surely never intended that an officeholder who proposed projects should sit on the Planning Commission, whose function was to pass on the merits of those projects. For nine weeks, ever since Wagner's election, they had been pressing him not to reappoint Moses to the commission. Although Wagner had told them he agreed fully with their views and had even hinted that, on Inauguration Day, there would be only two jobs waiting for Moses, they had been far from sure that he meant it. But now they realized that Wagner had in fact not given Moses the third oath—and the Planning Commission job. And, looking at Moses, they could see he realized it, too. His face, normally swarthy, was pale with rage.
The more observant among these spectators, however, noticed that after the ceremonies Moses followed Wagner into his inner office. They knew all too well what he would be saying to the new mayor; he had said it often enough, publicly and privately, orally and in writing, to Wagner's predecessors, Vincent R. Impellitteri and William O'Dwyer, and, even earlier, to the great La Guardia. "He's threatening to resign," they whispered to one another.
They were right. Behind the closed doors of the inner office, Moses was putting it to Wagner straight: If he didn't get the third post, he would quit the other two. And he'd do it right now. Wagner tried frantically to stall. The Planning Commission oath? The Mayor said. There must have been an oversight. Some clerk must have forgotten to fill out the appointment blank. Nothing to worry about. He'd see to it in a few days. Moses walked out of the Mayor's office and into the little room down the hall where a deputy mayor and his assistant were filing the appointment blanks. Snatching an unused blank off a sheaf on a table, he sat down at the table and filled it out himself. Then he walked back to Wagner's office and, without a word, laid the paper on the Mayor's desk.
Without a word, the Mayor pulled the paper toward him and signed it.
Robert Moses possessed at the time of his confrontation with Ed Richards an imagination that leaped unhesitatingly at problems insoluble to other men—the problem of financing minor sports had been tormenting Yale deans for two decades—and that, seemingly in 4he very moment of the leap, conceived of solutions. He possessed an iron will that put behind his solutions and dreams a determination to let nothing stand in their way—to form the Minor Sports Association he, only an undergraduate, had faced up to, and had finally faced down, Walter Camp, who was implacably opposed to its formation. And he possessed an arrogance which made him conceive himself so indispensable that, in his view, his resignation was the most awful threat he could think of.
Robert Moses possessed the same qualities during his confrontation with Robert Wagner. But by then he also possessed something more. He possessed power.
Power is the backdrop against which both confrontation scenes should be played. For power was the reason for the contrast in their denouements.
The whole life of Robert Moses, in fact, has been a drama of the interplay of power and personality. For a time, standing between it and him was an interceding force, the passionate idealism he had expressed in the Yale bull sessions. Dedicating his life to public service, he remained, during the first years of that service, the idealist of those bull sessions, an idealist possessed, moreover, of a vision of such breadth that he was soon dreaming dreams of public works on a scale that would dwarf any yet built in the cities of America. He wandered tirelessly around New York, and a woman who occasionally wandered with him said he was "burning up with ideas, just burning up with them," ideas for great highways and parks circling the city's waterfront and for more modest projects that he thought would also improve the quality of life for the city's people—little shelters, for instance, in Central Park so that mothers could change their babies' diapers without having to go all the way home. And when he argued for his ideas before the Good Government organization for which he worked and before the Board of Estimate, he was very careful always to have his facts ready, never to exaggerate them and always to draw from them logical conclusions, for he believed that Truth and Logic would prevail. When hexlecided to specialize, the area he chose—civil service reorganization—was one based on the same principle with which he had "awakened" "Five A" Johnson, the principle that jobs should be given and promotions based on merit rather than patronage. And he dedicated himself to that principle with the devotion of the acolyte. Brought into the administration of reforming Mayor John Purroy Mitchel in 1914, Moses devised, in a year of unremitting labor, a system that made every aspect of a city employee's performance—including facets of his personality—subject to a numerical grade. And for three additional years he fought for adoption of his system, battling a Board of Estimate dominated by one of the most corrupt political machines the United States had ever known, speaking night after night—a tall, very slim, very handsome young man with deep, burning eyes, dressed, often and appropriately, in a white suit, clutching a bulging briefcase and introduced to audiences as "Dr. Moses" in recognition of his Ph.D.—into hails of abuse from furious municipal employees who owed their jobs not to merit but to Tammany Hall, and observers said that the viciousness of the jeering crowds seemed to make no impression on him, so deeply did he believe that if only they could be made to understand how good his system was, they would surely support it. In those pre-World War I years of optimism, of reform, of idealism, Robert Moses was the optimist of optimists, the reformer of reformers, the idealist of idealists.
So great a nuisance did he make of himself that in 1918 Tammany Hall decided it had to crush him. It did so with efficiency. At the age of thirty, with the grading papers for his system being used as scrap paper, the Central Park shelters and great highways unbuilt, Robert Moses, Phi Beta Kappa at Yale, honors man at Oxford, lover of the Good, the True and the Beautiful, was out of work and, with a wife and two small daughters to support, was standing on a line in the Cleveland, Ohio, City Hall, applying for a minor municipal job—a job which, incidentally, he didn't get.
When the curtain rose on the next act of Moses' life, idealism was gone from the stage. In its place was an understanding that ideas—dreams—were useless without power to transform them into reality. Moses spent the rest of his life amassing power, bringing to the task imagination, iron will and determination. And he was successful. The oath that was administered to Robert Wagner in City Hall on January 1, 1954, should have given Wagner supreme power in New York. That was the theory. In democratic America,supposedly, ultimate power rests in the voters, and the man for whom a majority of them cast their votes is the repository of that power. But Wagner knew better. The spectators may have thought that he had a choice in dealing with Moses. He knew that he did not. Why, when Moses pushed the appointment blank across his desk, did the Mayor say not a word? Possibly because there was nothing to say. Power had spoken.
With his power, for twenty years prior to the day he strode out of City Hall in triumph (and for an additional fourteen years thereafter), Robert Moses shaped a city and its sprawling suburbs—and, to an extent that would have astonished analysts of urban trends had they measured the implications of his decades of handiwork, influenced the destiny of all the cities of twentieth century America.
The city in which the shaping by his hand is most evident is New York, Titan of cities, colossal synthesis of urban hope and urban despair. It had become a cliche by the mid-twentieth century to say that New York was "ungovernable," and this meant, since the powers of government in the city had largely devolved on its mayor, that no mayor could govern it, could hope to do more than merely stay afloat in the maelstrom that had engulfed the vast metropolis. In such a context, the cliche was valid. No mayor shaped New York; no mayor—not even La Guardia—left upon its roiling surface more than the faintest of lasting imprints.
But Robert Moses shaped New York.
Physically, any map of the city proves it. The very shoreline of metropolis was different before Robert Moses came to power. He rammed bulkheads of steel deep into the muck beneath rivers and harbors and crammed into the space between bulkheads and shore immensities of earth and stone, shale and cement, that hardened into fifteen thousand acres of new land and thus altered the physical boundaries of the city.
Standing out from the map's delicate tracery of gridirons representing streets are heavy lines, lines girdling the city or slashing across its expanses. These lines denote the major roads on which automobiles and trucks move, roads whose very location, moreover, does as much as any single factor to determine where and how a city's people live and work. With a single exception, the East River Drive, Robert Moses built every one of those roads. He built the Major Deegan Expressway, the Van Wyck Expressway, the Sheridan Expressway and the Bruckner Expressway. He built the Gowanus Expressway, the Prospect Expressway, the Whitestone Expressway, the Clearview Expressway and the Throgs Neck Expressway. He built the Cross-Bronx Expressway, the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, the Nassau Expressway, the Staten Island Expressway and the Long Island Expressway. He built the Harlem River Drive and the West Side Highway.
Only one borough of New York City—the Bronx—is on the mainland of the United States, and bridges link the island boroughs that form metropolis. Since 1931, seven such bridges were built, immense structures, some of them anchored by towers as tall as seventy-story buildings, supported by cables made up of enough wire to drop a noose around the earth. Those bridges are the Triborough, the Verrazano, the Throgs Neck, the Marine, the Henry Hudson, the Cross Bay and the Bronx-Whitestone. Robert Moses built every one of those bridges.
Scattered throughout New York stand clusters of tall apartment houses built under urban renewal programs and bearing color, splashed on terraces and finials, that in the twentieth-century American cityscape marks them as luxury dwellings. Alongside some of these clusters stand college lecture halls and dormitories. Alongside one stand five immense dingy white expanses of travertine that are Lincoln Center, the world's most famous, costly and imposing cultural complex. Alongside another stands the New York Coliseum, the glowering exhibition tower whose name reveals Moses' preoccupation with achieving an immortality like that conferred on the Caesars of Rome (feeling later that he could make the comparison even more exact, he built Shea Stadium, remarking when it was completed, "When the Emperor Titus opened the Colosseum in 80 A.D. he could have felt no happier"). Once the sites of the clusters contained other buildings: factories, stores, tenements that had stood for a century, sturdy, still serviceable apartment houses. Robert Moses decided that these buildings would be torn down and it was Robert Moses who decided that the lecture halls and the dormitories and the cultural center—and new apartment houses—would be erected in their place.
The eastern edge of Manhattan Island, heart of metropolis, was completely altered between 1945 and 1958. Northward from the bulge of Corlears Hook looms a long line of apartment houses devoid of splashes of color, hulking buildings, utilitarian, drab, unadorned, not block after block of them but mile after mile, appearing from across the East River like an endless wall of dull brick against the sky. Almost all of them—ninety-five looming over the river in the first two miles north of Corlears Hook—are public housing. They—and hundreds of similar structures huddled alongside the expressways or set in rows beside the Rockaway surf—contain 148,000 apartments and 555,000 tenants, a population that is in itself a city bigger than Minneapolis. These buildings were constructed by the New York City Housing Authority, 1,082 of them between 1945 and 1958. Robert Moses was never a member of the Housing Authority and his relationship with it was only hinted at in the press. But between 1945 and 1958 no site for public housing was selected and no brick of a public housing project laid without his approval.
Product details
- Publisher : Vintage
- Publication date : July 12, 1975
- Edition : later Printing
- Language : English
- Print length : 1344 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0394720245
- ISBN-13 : 978-0394720241
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.19 x 1.89 x 9.19 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,734 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3 in Sociology of Urban Areas
- #10 in Political Leader Biographies
- #21 in U.S. State & Local History
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Robert Allan Caro (born October 30, 1935) is an American journalist and author known for his celebrated biographies of United States political figures Robert Moses and Lyndon B. Johnson.
After working for many years as a reporter, Caro wrote The Power Broker (1974), a biography of New York urban planner Robert Moses, which was chosen by the Modern Library as one of the hundred greatest nonfiction books of the twentieth century. He has since written four of a planned five volumes of The Years of Lyndon Johnson (1982, 1990, 2002, 2012), a biography of the former president.
For his biographies, he has won two Pulitzer Prizes in Biography, the National Book Award, the Francis Parkman Prize (awarded by the Society of American Historians to the book that "best exemplifies the union of the historian and the artist"), two National Book Critics Circle Awards, the H.L. Mencken Award, the Carr P. Collins Award from the Texas Institute of Letters, the D.B. Hardeman Prize, and a Gold Medal in Biography from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by Larry D. Moore [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], via Wikimedia Commons.
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Customers find this biography fascinating and well-written, describing it as a riveting story that reads like a novel. The book is exhaustively researched and filled with details, making it a classic biography that customers consider thought-provoking. They appreciate the author's style, with one customer noting how it paints a vivid picture of New York's development. While the book receives positive feedback for its balanced view of Robert Moses, some customers find it too heavy to carry comfortably.
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Customers find the book highly readable and beautifully written, describing it as a riveting read that is worth every page.
"...This book is required reading for all Americans, particularly at a time when questions of executive authority are so prevalent...." Read more
"An incredible, riveting, dense (incredibly dense!) tale of one man and his machinations, and their net-positives and inevitable fallout...." Read more
"The best thing I read as an undergraduate. Fascinating read and the best history of NYC I have seen." Read more
"...Caro has covered each chapter of Moses life, and although it is well written the man doesn’t fully emerge from the past, nor does the old New York..." Read more
Customers find the book's story engaging and worthwhile, with one customer noting how detailed background information is provided for context, while another describes it as history that reads like fiction.
"...all those it affects is sweeping, cataclysmic, and yes also efficient, modern and beautiful...." Read more
"...Robert Caro's "The Power Broker" is quite simply one of the best books of the 20th century...." Read more
"An incredible, riveting, dense (incredibly dense!) tale of one man and his machinations, and their net-positives and inevitable fallout...." Read more
"...Fascinating read and the best history of NYC I have seen." Read more
Customers praise the book's depth, noting it is exhaustively researched and filled with details.
"...Really stunning. A must read for any history/infrastructure/politics nerd." Read more
"...Even with it’s faults it is essential reading on New York urban development." Read more
"Amazing character portrait, and a beautiful analysis of the unintended problems of smashing down old neighborhoods and beautiful countryside to..." Read more
"...This book does a splendid job by penetrating the most intimate details of Moses's large-than-life influence on city politics...." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the biography, describing it as wonderfully descriptive and incredibly entertaining, with one customer noting the author's meticulous research.
"...his massive LBJ pentalogy have been regarded as some of the best biographical works of the last fifty years, receiving many accolades, but this 1200..." Read more
"...From the very beginning of the book, Robert Caro teaches a masterclass on writing...." Read more
"...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..." Read more
"...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..." Read more
Customers appreciate the style of the book, describing it as fascinating and artfully told, with one customer noting how it illuminates both a man and a city.
"...Great photo inserts too. I have two copies, one beat up and falling apart, and a new recently purchased copy." Read more
"...He did this with an amazing commitment and undeniable style...." Read more
"...Really stunning. A must read for any history/infrastructure/politics nerd." Read more
"...Plus fabulous slice of New York (and American) history, with great portraits of Al Smith and Franklin D Roosevelt as well as succeeding NY governors..." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking and incisive, with one customer describing it as a masterfully articulated account.
"An incredible, riveting, dense (incredibly dense!) tale of one man and his machinations, and their net-positives and inevitable fallout...." Read more
"...The Power Broker is a book that will highlight the reader’s sense of morality...." Read more
"Great description of how modern bureaucracy works" Read more
"Expansive and detailed and well written, with verve. but the book needed tighter editing. those gargantuan dependent clauses, oy gevalt!" Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some appreciating its balanced view of Robert Moses, while others find it to be a horrible product.
"...Unfortunately NYC's infrastructure has declined over the past 50 years and it's doubtful anyone in power has learned from Moses or has his spatial..." Read more
"...Plus fabulous slice of New York (and American) history, with great portraits of Al Smith and Franklin D Roosevelt as well as succeeding NY governors..." Read more
"...but the book needed tighter editing. those gargantuan dependent clauses, oy gevalt!" Read more
"...VERY WELL Written, easy to read and follow. To me he presented a balanced view of the man -- abilities and warts...." Read more
Customers find the book heavy and difficult to carry comfortably.
"...is, maybe one out of those 100 have actually read this mammoth, fat, weighty, almost-a-bible 1250-page volume that is in my opinion, Robert Caro's..." Read more
"I own this book in paperback. Unfortunately, it weighs nearly 5 pounds and has rather small print...." Read more
"...One warning: The paperback weighs four pounds. So it's not a gentle weekend read. But very very worthwhile. J. Flaherty, Author" Read more
"An incredible, riveting, dense (incredibly dense!) tale of one man and his machinations, and their net-positives and inevitable fallout...." Read more
Reviews with images

... for over 1000 long pages about a mundane topic like urban politics
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2025Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThis is the book everyone prominently displays on their shelf, when interviewed on TV, to show how intelligent and well-read they are. It's actually quite comical, if not nauseating. Truth is, maybe one out of those 100 have actually read this mammoth, fat, weighty, almost-a-bible 1250-page volume that is in my opinion, Robert Caro's greatest work.
Robert Caro is a national treasure who has given the reading public a portrait rich in detail and meaning about a man arguably more powerful, with greater longevity and lasting impact on not just American society but globally; a feat of sheer will.
The story of Robert Moses, his ventures and projects, successes and failures, and all those it affects is sweeping, cataclysmic, and yes also efficient, modern and beautiful. His projects even today accommodate an ever-increasing driving public. Like the many presidents he would outlive and out-serve, Moses is a flawed man whose personal foibles and prejudices flow into his projects, his efforts to obtain approval and his public interaction. Caro describes a Machiavellian character who more often than not, succeeded in obtaining such approvals and sculpting the land to his vision.
The Power Broker is not, at least for me, a straight-through read. I read pieces at a time and over the years did finally actually read the whole thing. Great photo inserts too. I have two copies, one beat up and falling apart, and a new recently purchased copy.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2024Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThis is a book that five-star reviews were designed for.
Robert Caro's "The Power Broker" is quite simply one of the best books of the 20th century. His biography of Robert Moses, the man most singularly responsible for the shaping of 20th century New York City, defies superlatives. Epic yet intimate, "The Power Broker" describes in riveting detail the rise and fall of a unique American. Perhaps the biggest compliment one can give Caro over this book is that he managed to write it even though Moses fought hard to kill it.
And Moses was skilled at killing projects he didn't like. He did it for years, going toe-to-toe with business interests, citizens' groups, bureaucrats, lawyers, mayors, governors, and Presidents . . . and coming out on top. Lots of people are both charming and ruthless, but Moses built a power structure that made him, for decades, virtually unstoppable in terms of getting what he wanted done.
What is so sad is that Moses in many ways was a great man. Independently wealthy (but not obscenely so), he was committed to wresting control of New York from the oligarchs who ruled the Big Apple like it was their private enclave and keeping the most bucolic settings for themselves. Moses learned how to fight them, and he opened up vast stretches of beach for the "common man" to use and enjoy. He did this with an amazing commitment and undeniable style.
But Moses's ambition was limitless, and he learned that the only way to achieve that ambition was to accumulate power. That led Moses to get in bed with the power brokers - the bankers, the lawyers, the Tammany men - who knew how to profit from the public trough. He also learned to ignore the little guy, whose cause he once championed, to make the power brokers happy. He wrote legislation to give himself more power, and he designed agencies and authorities to make himself untouchable.
And then it all came crashing down. Along the way, he built great things and destroyed neighborhoods. He brought joy to thousands by creating parks and venues for their use, while evicting thousands of others and condemning them to live in absolute poverty. He barely took a salary, but lined the pockets of crooks and thieves by the score. But eventually, his sins were exposed, and the City that he built turned his back on him. A Shakespearean rise and fall in the Big Apple, to be sure.
All of this is told in Caro's brilliant prose.
This book is required reading for all Americans, particularly at a time when questions of executive authority are so prevalent. It is a doorstop of a book, but it is so worth the read. Highest recommendation.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2025Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseAn incredible, riveting, dense (incredibly dense!) tale of one man and his machinations, and their net-positives and inevitable fallout. Really stunning. A must read for any history/infrastructure/politics nerd.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2025Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThe best thing I read as an undergraduate.
Fascinating read and the best history of NYC I have seen.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2024Format: KindleVerified PurchaseMany years later, Robert Moses would say, "I didn't like New York at all. It was too big; the crowds, the noise and the confusion were terrible. I wanted to go back to New Haven, go to Yale and to become Governor of Connecticut. I felt that way all during my years in New York." - Robert Caro, ‘The Power Broker’
Robert Moses was appointed by:
Governor Al Smith (1919-1928)
Mayor Jimmy Walker (1926-32)
Mayor Fiorello La Guardia (1934-46)
Mayor William O’Dwyer (1946-50)
Mayor Vincent Impellitteri (1950-53)
Mayor Robert Wagner (1954-65)
Mayor John Lindsay (1966-73)
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Robert Caro opens his 1975 Pulitzer Prize winning biography of Robert Moses, founder of authorities who would control the development of New York from the mid 20’s to mid 70’s. As a student at Yale he had already directed the finances of student council. Forty five years later, in the mid 50’s to mid 60’s under Mayor Wagner, Moses simultaneously was made Commissioner of Parks, Planning and Construction, and consolidated power over virtually all new projects. Iron willed and irrepressible he never took no for an answer, controlling Mayors Smith, Walker, LaGuardia, Wagner, Lindsay and all in between.
Robert Caro’s ‘The Power Broker’ eroded Moses reputation in the wake of late career debacles at the 1965 World’s Fair and 1967 destruction of Penn Station, which gave birth to the Landmarks Commission. In the beginning he was an idealist who had envisioned parks and highways encircling Manhattan, fighting for merit based appointments to city jobs in the era of Tammany Hall. Public and private housing blocks, every highway but the FDR, nine bridges and tunnels across the Hudson and East Rivers, the United Nations and Lincoln Center projects, beaches and playgrounds were all planned and directed by him.
In the end he ruled with complete arrogance, razing entire neighborhoods, displacing hundreds of thousands of people, amputating boroughs with expressways to make way for mega projects. With his proficiency in planning he destroyed the political careers of anyone who stood in his way, while maintaining the fiction that the Authorities cost tax payers nothing and were run as efficient private enterprises. In fact the tolls collected were wastefully allocated and New York State financed construction loans were never intended to be repaid. His planning ideas became a model for public/private authorities across the country.
Moses grew up in New Haven CT where his mother had married a German Jewish merchant and real estate investor. He moved to New York City in 1897 at age nine to live with wealthy maternal relatives at 5th Avenue and Central Park. His grandmother was an activist who volunteered and donated to social welfare groups benefitting immigrants from East Europe in the Lower East Side. Her idealism had influenced him as he studied at Yale and Oxford, graduating with a PhD in political science from Columbia in 1914. He began work at the Bureau of Public Research advocating reform of civil service.
After a government appointment as the New York City and Long Island Parks Commissioner in 1924 by Governor Al Smith, Moses developed Jones Beach State Park and was appointed Secretary of State during 1927-29. From State Senator Jimmy Walker, later to be Mayor of NY City, he became versed in the black arts of politics. Moses ran for Governor in 1934, his last attempt at public office, and championed projects in FDR’s New Deal and WPA programs. He remained the Parks Commissioner while accruing other positions until 1960. Ford’s Model T and Moses vision would redefine the landscape.
Moses approach to politics evolved from elitist idealism to populism. All along the North Shore of Long Island rose the mansions of J. D. Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, J. P. Morgan and Carnegie, the robber barons of oil, rail, banks and steel, mere miles from the tenements of the city. Mansions had solid gold plumbing fixtures, private trains and thousand acre hunting grounds. Automobiles and work free weekends provided ordinary people the freedom to leave the city but there were few public parks and all of the beaches private. Outside of the city roads were unpaved by design, reachable only by ferry and thwarted by the wealthy.
All of this Moses would transform before the false idol of the automobile as a liberator of the masses and the agent of democratic reform. When he was done the city was stitched to the mainland and Long Island by a tremendous network of bridges, tunnels and highways, while the Bronx was cut off by vehicular trenches. Railways were abandoned for cargo delivery and replaced by the truck. The snarls of angry traffic reduced travel to the crawl of a centipede, pedestrians to the status of second class citizens. Bridges meant to be tolled to maintain the subways went free, and subway revenues were used for ever expanding state highways.
Robert Caro’s Power Broker and his massive LBJ pentalogy have been regarded as some of the best biographical works of the last fifty years, receiving many accolades, but this 1200 page monument is not for the faint of heart. Caro has covered each chapter of Moses life, and although it is well written the man doesn’t fully emerge from the past, nor does the old New York of the mid 20th century. What does appear however is the portrait of a politician who was a visionary, accepted no council but his own and succumbed to his own hubris. Even with it’s faults it is essential reading on New York urban development.
Top reviews from other countries
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JuliaReviewed in Italy on January 26, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars Per capire chi ha dato volto alla Grande Mela come oggi la conosciamo...
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseSi merita tutto il Premio Pulitzer vinto, questa biografia gigante che Caro fa di Robert Moses. Nonostante la mole notevole del libro, le pagine (in lingua inglese) scorrono placide sotto agli occhi, che divorano onnivori la storia di oltre mezzo secolo che viene qui presentata. Per chi ama New York, e ne vuole sapere di più; per gli architetti e gli urbanisti di tutto il mondo, che oggi come non mai hanno il dovere di comprendere certe dinamiche urbane (e, anche, politiche e di mercato) che influenzano profondamente la vita e lo sviluppo delle grandi metropoli contemporanee; per chi ha mai vissuto in questa meravigliosa città di contrasti ed opposti, o anche solo l'ha visitata qualche volta, rimanendo allibito davanti a ciò che, oltre un secolo fa, è stato reso possibile dall'uomo in una città. Per tutte queste persone, e molti altri, reputo interessantissimo questo scritto, che così bene districa e rende più visibili dinamiche di potere spesso tanto occulte quanto terribilmente potenti.
- BaldyReviewed in Canada on January 18, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars The classic
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseI have nothing to add that hasn't already been said. Excellent stuff.
- MolybdenumReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 9, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Absorbing, multi-layered portrait of a brilliant monster.
Long an admirer of Robert A Caro’s biographies of LBJ, I confess I had ignored The Power Broker because at first glance a book about a man who built bridges, roads, parks and civic buildings sounded bland compared to the complex personality of Lyndon Johnson. I was wrong and this book fully deserves its reputation as one of the best biographies ever written. Robert Moses was a peculiar man, initially fascinated by, of all things, the British Civil Service and how it remained incorruptible. He doesn’t appear to have been formally trained in anything but he quickly mastered the tedious aspects of statutes and how they are drafted, power structures and where true control and authority lie. He learned a great deal from Gov Al Smith, to whom he was devoted, but unlike Smith, Moses was not a benign man. Throughout his career his personal power was protected by foresight, and the killer clause. He was never elected to anything (and his one attempt to run for office almost destroyed him by exposing his raw and ruthless personality). He was Park Commissioner because that role gave him the kind of inviolate authority that politicians could only envy. It also meant that the public thought he fought on the side of the angels because everyone likes parks. In his early days he was an idealist, and armed with a letter of passage by the Governor, he tirelessly explored the virgin hinterland of New York, jealously guarded by the Robber Baron families who wanted to exclude the riff-raff from the wilderness and the seaside. He planned Parkways that would enable middle-class Americans to drive to the countryside previously barred to them by the privileged. He built vast and luxurious venues where previously there had been just sand, with building materials and leisure facilities second to none. He understood structural engineering and drove his loyal (and often terrified) staff to produce blueprints and plans and costings in record time. And although he was most active during the Depression years, money never seemed to be a problem. The myriad financial deals and bond issues can become dense at times but they were directly related to the freedom given him by the structure of an ‘Authority’, compared to a municipality, city or state administration. He had no personal interest in money, and coming from a wealthy family had refused a salary. He was ‘money honest’ but as his taste for power grew he became corruptible, fascinated by power for its own sake. The idealist of the early chapters soon turns into something of a monster with huge prejudices against lower class people, blacks and ethnics. When he built his Expressways and Parkways he deliberately made the bridges crossing them too low to permit buses because he just wasn’t interested in people who didn’t drive a car. Ironically, he never learned to drive a car himself and was chauffered everywhere in a luxurious limo that served as his mobile office. As his engineering megalomania grew he evicted thousands of tenants and bulldozed their houses and tenements to make way for another road. The cruelty with which this was done was later exposed and led to his downfall. He drove his engineers and structural crews very hard and the New York bridges he built are his monuments along with the UN Building and the Lincoln Centre. Only very late did it dawn on people that Moses’ roads didn’t reduce congestion at all; they did the opposite, feeding traffic into huge jams and making commuting a nightmare. Cars didn’t just fill roads, they needed to be parked in the City and at the airport. Moses despised trains and buses so mass transit was never part of his plans, as anyone lining up for a cab at JFK can testify. Yet this fascinating man continues to confound the reader. Physically driven, he worked long days then relaxed by diving into the sea and swimming for miles. The atmosphere in his offices was lively and chatty and invigorating and he instilled loyalty as well as affection (and terror). He always defended his subordinants fiercely and was contemptuous of complaints, petitions or legal challenges. He cultivated the press who loved him to the point of dereliction of duty as far as the common good was concerned. For a long time most of the press were in awe of him and he could do no wrong, and the little people he had pushed around had to wait a long time for justice. But he was a mean SOB too, unforgiving and vengeful. Chapter 26 is a fascinating description of his relationship with his older brother, who he destroyed, and his mother, and only a psychiatrist could unravel the darkness there. (Chapter 35 also gives fascinating insights into Moses). But Caro’s skill as a biographer makes us feel sorry for Moses when his downfall finally arrives, at the hands of some maverick reporters and Nelson Rockefeller. At the same time the realisation dawns that his life’s work as a builder of roads and bridges caused far more problems than it resolved, and ultimately his career was devalued. Power was so important to him that to be excluded from it was agony, and he became a ghost haunting a landscape he had built.
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Franco RomeroReviewed in Mexico on August 1, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Lectura necesaria
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseExcelente libro, y calidad de portada y hojas. Muy recomendable.
- Guillermo RodasReviewed in Sweden on June 5, 2023
1.0 out of 5 stars It's missing the first 8 pages (possible more)
I'm going to return the book because it's missing the first pages.
Guillermo RodasIt's missing the first 8 pages (possible more)
Reviewed in Sweden on June 5, 2023
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