Why did I love this book?
For years I resisted reading Pulitzer Prize-winning author Robert Caro’s four-volume (soon-to-be-five) series on Lyndon Baines Johnson.
Growing up in the 1960s, I disliked Johnson’s disastrously tragic approach to the Vietnam War, and I couldn’t imagine reading a four-volume series on someone “I didn’t like.” But after fifty pages I was hooked. Caro taught me that the role of a biographer is to seek to understand their subject, not excessively praise or condemn them.
The series also showed me how to incorporate just the right amount of context in the narrative (not too much, not too little). The book is also a study of Ambition and its consequences. After reading this series you’ll understand how Congress operates, and how even deeply- flawed people can still do good things, like LBJ’s commitment to pass civil rights legislation after JFK’s tragic assassination.
6 authors picked The Path to Power as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
'The greatest biography of our era ... Essential reading for those who want to comprehend power and politics' The Times
Robert A. Caro's legendary, multi-award-winning biography of US President Lyndon Johnson is a uniquely riveting and revelatory account of power, political genius and the shaping of twentieth-century America.
This first instalment tells of the rise to national power of a desperately poor young man from the Texas Hill Country, revealing in extraordinary detail the genesis of the almost superhuman drive, energy and ambition that set LBJ apart. It charts his boyhood through the years of the Depression to his debut…