The Power Broker

Robert Moses and the Fall of New York

Hardcover, 1296 pages

English language

Published July 12, 1974 by Alfred A. Knopf.

ISBN:
978-0-394-48076-3
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OCLC Number:
834874
ASIN:
0394480767
Goodreads:
1800056

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5 stars (1 review)

For the sheer magnitude, depth and authority of its revelations, The Power Broker stands alone---a huge and galvanizing biography revealing not only the virtually unknown saga of one man's incredible accumulation of power, but the hidden story of the shaping (and mis-shaping) of New York through the past half-century.

Robert Caro's monumental book makes public what few outsiders have known: that Robert Moses was the single most powerful man of our 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 new 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 …

5 editions

Review of "The Power Broker"

5 stars

One of the best books I've ever read, and probably my biggest reading achievement.

I loved the way it was written. It filled in a lot of gaps about (US) urban planning/politics that I think were important. It's definitely a sobering look at how things "get done"... and if I read it at a different time I think it would have been too frustrating to finish.

Chapters 39 and 40 are I think the most impactful for me. The fact that they all knew none of this was working and still kept at expanding highways just really shows how nothing has changed and that this whole "traffic planning" is a farce and had no basis in reality to begin with. Maybe the externalities/costs are too abstract, idk anymore.

Thanks for nothin, Moses.