Book cover of The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York

Book description

The Power Broker by Robert A. Caro is 'simply one of the best non-fiction books in English of the last forty years' (Dominic Sandbrook, Sunday Times): a riveting and timeless account of power, politics and the city of New York by 'the greatest political biographer of our times' (Sunday Times);…

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Why read it?

14 authors picked The Power Broker as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

I abhorred Robert Moses from the first time I opened this book 20 years ago.

This power-grabbing bureaucratic functionary made me ill on some level, mad as hell on another, and want to take a shower after each time I opened the book.

In the end, I still hated Moses for his gall and immoral audacity, but you could not deny his accomplishments, as he saw them. Nevertheless, I had to love a book that could take such a scoundrel whom I grew to loathe and make me glad I read it.

I loved this book. It is an exploration of the arc of one man's life (Robert Moses) with a compassionate perspective on how this affected the lives of many people in New York. The book is suffused with deep research and understanding of the man and his times. This is a remarkable book.

Every biographer must do battle with Robert Caro’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book, a monumental account of urban planner Robert Moses, whose God-like power redesigning postwar New York City effectively remade the capital of the twentieth century. Over the course of 1,336 pages, Caro details Moses’s world-making vision while also acknowledging problematic issues, such as Moses’s reported use of racial slurs and his remapping of roads and overpasses to exclude poorer communities.

Today, half a century since its first publication, The Power Broker remains one of the greatest English-language biographies. It's also a landmark in showing how world-historical change can begin with…

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Book cover of A Block in Time: A New York City History at the Corner of Fifth Avenue and Twenty-Third Street

A Block in Time by Christiane Bird,

This is the story of New York City, told through the prism of one block. It’s a story of forest and cement, bird cries and taxi horns, theaters and brothels, hotels and factories, gambling dens and gourmet foods. 

It’s also the story of high life and low life, immigrants and…

If I hadn’t read this book, I’d never believe a man like Robert Moses could have ever existed. For all his pros and cons, I liked him. I’m including this book because Caro includes a chapter on Moses and his involvement with both New York’s World’s Fairs and it offers the history behind the fairs. I felt this biography was a little on the ‘con’ side, but I liked Caro’s thoroughness and felt I had a good feel for the man for having read the book.

Caro is very good at explaining how political power works and how it shapes the built environment both for the state and the city. And although it’s focused on New York, it applies to any city and state. It helps understand why things look the way they do and how they got built.

From Roberta's list on authentic urbanism.

Pulitzer Prize winner and arguably the best nonfiction work of the last 75 years. I read this 1,000+ page book twice....twenty years apart. Best exposition on how things, big things, got done by a man who never ran for office nor invested his own money.

The master builder who built more roads, beaches, parks, pools, and projects than all politicians in America combined. A study on gaining and maintaining absolute power in 20th-century America without using money or votes. I believe a reading of this work is essential to an understanding of urban politics.

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Book cover of We Gather Together: A Nation Divided, a President in Turmoil, and a Historic Campaign to Embrace Gratitude and Grace

We Gather Together by Denise Kiernan,

From the New York Times bestselling author of The Last Castle and The Girls of Atomic City comes a new way to look at American history: through the lens of giving thanks.

Author Denise Kiernan tells the fascinating story of Sarah Josepha Hale, a widowed mother of five who campaigned…

After I saw the film, Turn Every Page, which featured the relationship between editor Robert Gottlieb, and the book’s author, Robert Cairo, I decided I had to read this very famous book, and one that I should have read years ago. 

It’s massive and somewhat daunting, but once I started, I couldn’t put it down. I write (and used to teach) about environmental politics. This book, which focuses on the career of Robert Moses, can also be viewed as an environmental history of New York City’s built environment: the parks, the highways, the housing developments, and even the playgrounds.…

Do you remember watching the news during the pandemic, when you could see everybody’s bookcases for the first time? 

There’s a reason that everyone kept noticing this book over and over and again. First, it’s really long, which means it’s thick and the spine is very recognizable. More importantly, most people read it because of what Caro has to say about the nature of political power.

It’s a biography of Robert Moses, who held multiple state and local positions that allowed him to build most of the infrastructure in and around New York City during the mid-twentieth century: highways, bridges,…

From Jonathan's list on the history of New York City.

A gnawing hunger for the truth animates this towering author’s work on Robert Moses, New York City’s longtime “master builder” who reshaped and indisputably wrecked large chunks of thriving Gotham over the first half of the twentieth century. This book was staggeringly influential for me as a young urbanist and author coming to grips with the forces that mold the urban landscape. Caro’s intrepid, old-school reporting—a model of investigative journalism, the likes of which we could sorely use more of today—showed how one dogged writer could blow open the portals of power, hold the mighty to account, and reframe how…

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Book cover of Malcolm Before X

Malcolm Before X by Patrick Parr,

Malcolm Before X is about finding a way to continue moving forward after everything has been taken from you. While in prison, Malcolm Little discovered the power of reading and found a way to transform his character and become a better man. This half-biography focuses on that transformation, especially his…

Arguably, no single person has shaped the built environment of New York City as much as Robert Moses. To some, he was an evil dictator imposing his will on the urban fabric; while to others, he was the man who got things done. In his four-decade career, Moses oversaw the buildings of beaches, parks, highways, bridges, tunnels, public housing, slum clearance projects, and World Fairs. Caro’s work is a detailed chronicle of Moses’ life and projects. Five decades later, one can quibble with Caro’s conclusions, but it remains a jaw-dropping tome about how Moses reshaped New York, for good and…

From Jason's list on the New York City skyline.

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Book cover of A Block in Time: A New York City History at the Corner of Fifth Avenue and Twenty-Third Street

A Block in Time by Christiane Bird,

This is the story of New York City, told through the prism of one block. It’s a story of forest and cement, bird cries and taxi horns, theaters and brothels, hotels and factories, gambling dens and gourmet foods. 

It’s also the story of high life and low life, immigrants and…

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