Everywhere acknowledged as a modern American classic, winner of the Pulitzer Prize, and chosen by the Modern Library as one of the hundred greatest books of the twentieth century, The Power Broker is a huge and galvanizing biography revealing not only the saga of one man\'s incredible accumulation of power, but the story of the shaping (and mis-shaping) of New York in the twentieth century.
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--a.
He was, he claimed, above politics, above deals; and through decade after decade, the newspapers and the public believed.
He was held in fear--his dossiers could disgorge the dark secret of anyone who opposed him.
Moses built an empire and lived like an emperor.
How, inevitably, the accumulation of Power became an end in itself.
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, rebuffed by the entrenched political establishment, he fought for the Power to accomplish his ideals.
We see how Moses began: the handsome, intellectual young heir to the world of Our Crowd, an idealist.
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.
Lindsay and Nelson Rockefeller.
Roosevelt (and the genesis of their blood feud), about Fiorello La Guardia, John V.
Smith and Franklin D.
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.
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.
Everywhere acknowledged as a modern American classic, winner of the Pulitzer Prize, and chosen by the Modern Library as one of the hundred greatest books of the twentieth century, The Power Broker is a huge and galvanizing biography revealing not only the saga of one man\'s incredible accumulation of power, but the story of the shaping (and mis-shaping) of New York in the twentieth century