The Daily - 'Book Review': Robert Caro on 50 Years of 'The Power Broker'
Episode Date: September 22, 2024Robert Caro’s 1974 biography “The Power Broker” is a book befitting its subject, Robert Moses — the unelected parochial technocrat who used a series of appointed positions to entirely reshape ...New York City and its surrounding environment for generations to come. Like Moses, Caro’s book has exerted an enduring and outsize influence. Caro recently joined The Times’s Book Review Podcast to discuss his experience writing the seminal book, and how he accounts for its continuing legacy.You can find more information about that episode here.
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Hey everyone, it's Michael.
As you might have noticed, we're putting something different down our feed today.
It's a recent episode of our New York Times podcast about books hosted by Gilbert Cruz.
In this particular episode, Gilbert speaks with the writer Robert Caro about his seminal
renowned non-fiction book, The Power Broker, which is now 50 years old.
If you haven't read it, and there's no reason
to be embarrassed if you haven't,
it's the story of Robert Moses, who shaped New York City.
But as the many people who are obsessed
with The Power Broker can tell you,
it's a singular fable of politics and power
in the United States.
It's an incredible story and an incredible book. Okay, here's Gilbert
with Robert Caro on the New York Times Book Review podcast. Take a listen.
I'm Gilbert Cruz, editor of the New York Times Book Review, and this is the Book Review
Podcast. This week, I'm joined by a modern master of biography and history writing,
Mr. Robert Caro. He has written four volumes of The Years of Lyndon Johnson, a multi-book work
on the life of the 36 presidents of the United States. Volume 3, Master of the Senate, won the
Pulitzer Prize. Volume 4, Passage of Power, appeared on our recent list of the best books of the
21st century so far.
Before all that, however, in September 1974, fifty years ago, he published The Power Broker,
a book about the man who built modern New York City, Robert Moses.
Robert Moses built beaches and parkways, he built bridges and expressways. He built Lincoln Center and Shea Stadium
and the United Nations headquarters.
Robert Caro built The Power Broker,
a book both titanic in length and scope,
and one that continues to be read and discussed
and obsessed over to this very day.
Robert Caro, welcome back to the Book Review Podcast.
Pleasure to be here.
Now Mr. Caro, and I'm going to call you Bob because we just discussed what I should call
you.
I don't want to necessarily go through a summary of the book.
I want to go through a summary of who Robert Moses is.
I think if people are listening to this interview, they've read it, or maybe they've seen the
documentary Turn Every Page from a few years ago about you and Bob Gottlieb. Hopefully I'm not going to ask you to say
things about Robert Moses that you've been saying for the past half century. But 50 years
is significant. I would argue that nonfiction, biography, history, a lot of it doesn't stand
the test of time in that way. But the power broker has. And I'm wondering why you think
it has lasted as this own monument in its way for so long, 50 years.
I'm not sure I know the answer to that question. I've been thinking about that. I think people
are interested in power. This is a particular kind of power. Robert Moses's power was unchecked
power. We all live in a democracy where we think that power comes from our votes at the
ballot box. Here was a man who was never elected to anything, and he held on to power for 44
years, almost half a century. And with the power, this man who wasn't elected to anything
shaped New York and its surrounding suburbs.
So I think if you're interested in government,
you have to say, as I said, maybe 55 years ago
when I started this, how did he do it?
What happened here?
No one even, I have to say, when I started this book, I
don't think there was any real awareness, even among mayors and council members and
governors, of where this power came from. Do you have a sense, this book being 50 years old, that people that go into government read it
and have read it?
I know that many journalists pick it up early
in their careers because it is such a sort
of impressive achievement in reporting and writing.
But when it comes to people in government,
do you talk to Congress people and senators and state representatives who
say, I read The Power Broker when I was 25?
Yes, to be honest with you.
And what is their takeaway?
They're very complimentary about it.
I think over and over you hear, I hear people say, you explain, this is, you're making me say boastful things.
I've never read anything like it.
You've explained to me where power comes from,
a particular kind of power.
Now I see that kind of thing.
Of course, very wonderful to me to hear it.
I think a lot of the things that I learned in the book
still hold very true today.
You have written so much about power,
whether it's in this book or over the many volumes of your Lyndon Johnson
biography and said in a Paris Review interview the following and I just I
love the way you put it and I'd love for you to comment upon it further if you
can you said power doesn't always corrupt and you can see it in the case
of for example Al Smith or Sam Rayburn their power cleanses but what power
always does is reveal talk to me a little bit more about that when you're
trying to get power when you're climbing toward power,
maybe there are things in you or ways that you're acting
to get power that if people knew about them
they would be turned off on you or they'd be afraid of you.
But once you get the power, once you have it,
then you can act or do whatever
you intended to do all along.
A really good example of that is Lyndon Johnson, who for 20 years voted with the South on every
civil rights bill.
Even he even voted against the bill that would have made lynching a federal crime.
And then he becomes president.
President Kennedy is assassinated.
And he has to give a speech to Congress four days later.
And he's not even in the Oval Office yet,
he's still living down in Spring Valley.
And he's going living down in Spring Valley, and he's
going to bed and downstairs there are four of his speech writers, his aides, working
on the speech that he has to give to Congress and reveal what kind of president he's going
to be.
And he comes down and he says basically, how are you doing?
And they say, we're still not doing very well, but one thing we are all agreed on, don't
make a priority out of civil rights.
If you do that, the Southern senators who have the power in the Senate will do the same
thing to you that they did to Kennedy and stop your entire congressional.
And they say, it's a noble cause, one of them says, but it's not a cause
that you should fight for.
And Lyndon Johnson says, what's a presidency for then?
And in the speech he says, our first priority should be to pass Jack Kennedy's Civil Rights
Bill. Jack Kennedy's civil rights bill. And you say, if the Southern senators had for all those years
knew how he felt, they would not have raised him to power. So it's really, in a way, I hope,
a perfect example of what you asked me for. Is it possible to rise to power, at least in
our system of democracy,
without that sort of veiled part of you,
that shadow part of you,
where you know some things that you believe,
but you know that if you tell people too loudly,
that you'll never get what you want,
which is to be in charge.
It's a terrific question,
and I can't answer it for,
in the large sense for everybody.
I know with Lyndon Johnson, it was absolutely necessary
just to go in the Senate.
When he comes to the Senate, well, I forget the year,
but this is approximately right.
There's 17 great standing committees of the Senate,
and Southern is the chairman of 11 of them.
They have the power. If they
don't like you, you are not going anywhere in the Senate, and he wants to rise to power
in the Senate. He cannot let them know, and he's a genius at concealing himself. And if
you want to know just how much of a genius he is in this regard. The leader of the South is Richard Russell.
There are chapters called,
the Russell of the Russells of Georgia.
They are a ruling family.
And he asked the secretary of the Senate,
a guy named Bobby Baker,
he says, everybody else who comes to the Senate,
asks what are the rules, where do you sit?
Lyndon Johnson only asked one question,
who has the power here?
I had no trouble, I said Richard Russell.
Johnson doesn't ask for an important committee,
he says what's Russell's committee?
He's chairman of armed services.
Lyndon Johnson says, I'd like to be on armed services
because he knows that's
the only way he can spend a lot of time with Richard Russell. He starts to stay late at
the Senate because Russell is a bachelor, very lonely man, and he stays late working.
Now Lyndon Johnson stays working with him. Richard Russell gets a hamburger late at night
before he goes home. Lyndon Johnson gets a hamburger with him. Richard Russell gets a hamburger late at night before he goes home.
Lyndon Johnson gets a hamburger with him. Sunday breakfast, he invites Richard Russell
over, or Sunday brunch more. He has two little girls. Russell is very wonderful with little
children. He loves them. They love him. And soon they are very close. So Richard Russell
is sitting there
right in front of Lyndon Johnson
when he's become president.
And Lyndon Johnson says,
our first priority has to become civil rights.
And afterwards, one of the senators,
Southern senators says to Richard Russell,
what was that about?
And Richard Russell says,
a turncoat if I ever saw one. So he concealed his feelings
from the smartest of man for, I have to do it from 1948 to 1964 for approximately 16
years.
I need to start staying late with my bosses is the lesson I'm taking away from that.
The book is 50 years old, The Power Broker.
You wrote and reported it more than 50 years ago.
I wonder if there's anything new that you have learned about Robert Moses since publishing
the book.
There's so much in this, but did you ever come across a new set of letters, a new archive,
a new assistant?
Actually, no.
Wow.
That's incredible.
You tapped every resource.
You make me say boastful things, but the fact is, the answer to your question is honestly,
no.
People keep sending me, I have a letter from Robert Moses.
It's not the new material housing coming, but nothing that would change anything of a significance.
You have an office that you walk to every day. You were a Jackie, we're a Ty, you go to your same
office. The office is near Columbus Circle. In Columbus Circle used to be a
building called the New York Coliseum that Robert Moses built. The New York
Coliseum no longer exists. And I wonder if you ever thought about when it was
finally time for that to come down how even the things that the master builder
builds, not everything can stand.
Oh, I thought about that a lot because I used to have an office there and I used to look
down on the Coliseum and I used to remember that Robert Moses used to say, my works will
make me, that's not a quote, but he used to say things that meant, my works will make
me immortal.
And I think he is in a, by the sheer number of works.
Some of them will come down, you know, the Coliseum.
Did he build Shea Stadium? I can't recall.
Oh, he was responsible.
Okay, did Shea Stadium no longer exist?
There may be a couple of other ones,
but by and large, the things,
the lines that he etched into a piece of paper are still there.
And for all I know, they'll be there forever.
And more than that, if I may say so,
the shape, by which I mean the daily lives of New Yorkers.
For example, we have a house in eastern Long Island.
So we started driving into New York on a weekday night,
about 5, 5.irty, so rush hour,
and at Port Jefferson, it started.
Now, if you're commuting from Port Jefferson to Manhattan,
it's two and a half, about two and a half hours each way.
That's five hours of your life every day.
25 hours a week, a thousand hours a year,
and the tiring hours, you get home tired.
It didn't have to be this way. In the 1950s when Robert Moses starts to build
the Long Island Expressway, Long Island, Eastern Nassau, certainly all the
southern, is mainly farms. Land is really cheap. He is buying 70 miles of right-of-way,
and he's buying 200 feet of it.
And everybody is saying to him,
this land is cheap now,
but as soon as the expressway opens up,
it's gonna be crowded.
You're not gonna be able to buy the land cheaply
then you'll never be able to afford it.
Instead of buying 200 feet right of way, if you buy just 20 feet more, 240 feet instead
of 200, that's enough to build a light rail line down the center of the expressway.
And every 10 or 15 miles, since the land is so cheap, you can build a huge parking lot.
So people who want to drive to New York
or anywhere else on the, can drive.
But if you don't want to, you can use rail lines.
He's so afraid that this might, he refuses to do it.
So they say, okay, if you won't build the light rail line,
at least by the 40 feet,
then in the future someone can build it.
He's so afraid that might happen
that he doesn't buy the 40 feet,
but he also builds the foundations of the expressway
so light that light rail can never be put on it.
So you say, I was driving into New York
and I'm driving against however many miles it
is to Port Jefferson, a solid lane of headlights coming out, people trapped in their cars,
trapped every day.
And I'm saying it didn't have to be like this.
So let me ask you a question.
So you live in New York, you're from New York, you understand now following the writing of
this book how New York City works in part because of the decisions that this one man
made.
Even all these years after writing The Power Broker, do you say to yourself, God damn you,
Robert Moses, why do I have to be caught in traffic here because you did not want to put
up this light rail?
I've never said it quite like that,
but I have bored my wife by saying you see all these cars that didn't have to
be this way. Yeah.
You have such a well-documented process.
And I think people love to ask you about your process and talk to you about your
process because it's so meticulous and reliable and because clearly it results in
good work.
It results in some of the best pieces of biography and history of the past half century.
But what do you think is the obsession with process when it comes to being a writer?
Well, I do get asked about it all the time.
Mostly with a feeling I can see it in their eyes, schmuck.
What do you mean? Mostly with a feeling, I can see it in their eyes, shmuck.
Everybody else, people ask me,
I outline the whole book before I start writing.
And then I outline each chapter
as I get up to it in great detail.
And then I write it in longhand.
And then I generally, I have a lot of drafts. If you came to my office
in the late afternoon, you'd see crumpled up pieces of paper all over the place. And
then I type, so I use a computer now a lot to take notes because the Vietnam material in the Lyndon Johnson Library,
it's just big. I need to do it. But I don't use a computer in the writing.
Everybody thinks, aren't you slow? Couldn't you be faster? For me, it's more important to be slow.
And it's not a blessing or anything I'm proud of. I just learned the hard way that things go better for me if I do it slowly.
I can understand that because everyone has to find their own way of writing and I certainly
have talked to people who say, I'm thinking with my hand.
This is the way in which ideas and connections
and particular words and transitions are coming to me.
And if I did it on a computer or typewriter
or something else, it just would not come out the same way.
They can't explain why.
They don't know what the connection is
between their brain and their hand
and the pencil and the paper,
but that's just the way that it works.
Yes.
And I imagine that's true for you?
Yes.
When I was a newspaper man, I was for a time a rewrite man at Newsday, and I was the fastest
rewrite man.
You know, at Newsday they used to have five editions because they had an out east edition,
a mid-suffolk edition.
And I'd sit there with my headphones on if there was a plane crash or something else,
and I'd write five leads.
I can write fast.
When I started to do The Power Broker,
I remember thinking,
if you don't slow yourself down,
this book isn't gonna be any good.
And that's what, I don't know exactly why I thought that,
but now I realize that the way I am naturally
is I write slowly.
Did you think, if you can cast your mind back to then,
did you think that if I wrote this quickly
in the way that maybe you are inherently built
to do, you would, it would be sloppy, you would miss stuff, you wouldn't make certain
connections?
What was it?
I'll tell you one thing.
You had to figure out what it was Robert Moses did.
How did he get this power?
That wasn't something that you learned
Gradually people gave you hints as to creating the public authority, you know
Remember reading the bill that he drafted to make himself chairman of the Troy Borough Bridge and Tunnel Authority Which was the heart of his power and I remember thinking I'm not getting what he's doing in this bill
And it took me I think that the bill was his power. And I remember thinking, I'm not getting what he's doing in this bill. And
it took me, I think that the bill was, it was very long, as I remember, it was like
40 pages long, of small type. And I had to sit there and then suddenly I said, oh, that's
what he did. And a lot started to come clear for me then.
And then you said, why did he want to do this or that
or how did he think of Jones Beach,
the great early things that he did?
So you would go to his engineers and people who dealt
and say to them, listen, you talked about how he used
to walk along the dunes here,
and sometimes you'd go with him, what was he like?
You'd ask these people over and over again, no, what was he like? What would he do?
And you would ask me, that's not a fast process.
It's not even fast to get the person to realize, oh, this young kid, Kero,
he wants me to talk about what he looked like.
Yes, that's what I wanted him to talk about.
But it takes a long time.
Sometimes you have to go back to the same person
over and over again to get him to tell you
what you really wanna know.
You keep asking me why things take so long.
That's why they take so long.
We should do this podcast three more times
and then we'll get the right answers.
What, when did you know or when do you know
as an interviewer who as part of your process,
as you just said, you go back or you ask the same questions
over and over again, you go back to people multiple times,
you're asking for their time.
When do you know, I need to back off,
or I've asked this too many times,
or they're getting annoyed, or I'm close.
Oh, they often get annoyed.
I can't stop because of me.
How do you know when you're pushing them to the point
that's just before them saying, get out of here?
I'll give you an example of that, if you want.
Sure, please, please.
On the Lyndon Johnson book, and I'm on the power broker.
So he had an aide named Joe Califano.
I think you probably know his name and he was in the oval office a lot.
Now I'm trying to describe Lyndon Johnson in the oval office and I'm asking
Califano over and over.
I have to describe him.
You might.
I'd say, would he always be at the desk in Califano?
He would say, no.
He'd be pacing around a lot.
Then you say, what else would he do when he was pacing?
You know, would he stop?
He said, well, he'd go over to the,
Lyndon Johnson had three teletype machines,
Associated Press, United Press, and Reuters
in the office against one wall.
And he said he'd go over and read the latest thing.
And you'd say, what do you mean he'd read the latest thing?
And basically the answer is, schmuck, I just told you he read the latest things.
How did he read them?
He just read them.
So was he standing up when he was reading them?
No.
Sometimes he was so anxious to see the last line that he kneeled down and with both hands
he take the piece of paper that was coming out of the machine and pull it towards him
so he could read the last line.
Maybe what I just told you, I may have been asking him questions
for three or four interviews about that, about what he looked like. And it happens over and over
again. So that's an intimidating process for one who, for someone else who may want to write a
biography or a piece of history, it's quite time consuming. And not only is it time consuming,
but I think anyone who reads The Power Broker would agree
that is also, as you have said many times,
you tried to do a real piece of literary work.
It's not only the facts, it is the pros.
It's not only the pros, but it's the style and the rhythm
and the way that all of that fits together.
And people talk time and again about the lists
that you put in the intro,
that you talk about taking that from the Iliad.
And I'm wondering how long it takes you
to find that right rhythm.
How did you know when you're writing the parkways
that the parkways go in this order
and they don't go in this order?
And actually the Hutchinson River Parkway goes here
in the third sentence and not in the first sentence.
How long does it take you to do this?
Long. Long. That one, what you just, the example you gave, I said nobody's going to read a book about Robert Moses.
In fact, everybody told me nobody's going to read a book about Robert Moses.
I said I have to show them I, that he shaped New York completely.
And part of it was shaping it with all his different roads.
And I said, how am I going to do that?
You can't just say he built 627 miles of road.
That's going to get no one to read the book.
And you can't just say he built this parkway
and then this parkway, that's boring,
that's not gonna get any easier.
And I thought, you just mentioned it,
oh, I've seen a list of a lot of things
and it's in the Iliad.
And I said, how did he do that?
He listed, he showed the immensity of the seas of Troy
by listing all the ships.
I said, so I'll list all the parkways.
So I remember typing this, I said,
God, this is boring, you're just listing all the parkways.
I said, but maybe there's a rhythm in this thing
that will make people read it on and see the immensity
of all the roads that he built.
And I can't tell you, you asked in a way,
very polite way, what takes my book so long.
I can't tell you, but how many days really it took me
to put the parkways and the expressways in a different order.
And I hoped that got people to feel the immensity of what this man did.
I certainly don't want to give the impression that all I'm curious about is why it takes you so long to write books.
I'm asking about how you do it more than anything else.
And the side effect of that is that it is time intensive and clearly that has good results. But I'm
not hammering you over how it takes you to write your books. It works for you and I think
it works for everyone that reads your book. I'm curious. He built the Major Deegan Expressway,
the Van Wick Expressway, the Sheridan Expressway and the Bruckner Expressway. Is it you saying, no, actually, let me read it out loud
with the Bruckner Expressway as the last one.
I'm trying to picture you sitting down
and almost as if a puzzle reworking these.
Yes, I'm reading, I'm reading.
Then all of a sudden it came together in my mind
what I wanted to do, how to do it, how to do it.
And I just, it was very clear the next morning I got up, or I think probably, I don't really
remember, and wrote it out.
And it seems so simple to me, I couldn't understand why I didn't know it before. But I do think, again, if I can say, that things like rhythm are very
important in nonfiction writing as well as in fiction writing. When we talk about literary
things, we talk about it in terms of novels. You never hear it really, or very seldom, do you
hear it talked about what makes a nonfiction book great? I believe that if
you want people to read a piece of nonfiction and if you want it to endure,
the level of the writing, the prose, the rhythm, the word, the choice of words, getting the right word,
is just as important in non-fiction books as it is in fiction books.
We'll be right back.
This is the Book Review Podcast.
I'm Gilbert Cruz and I'm here with Robert Caro, author of The Power Broker.
I think one of the great delights for anyone who's read at least one of your books was
watching that documentary turn every page that came out a few years ago, just seeing
you, seeing your creative partner and sometimes foil Robert Gottlieb talk about the ways in
which you approach this.
And I'm curious as someone who's written about power for so long, what were the power
dynamics like between you and Mr. Gottlieb?
Was it constantly shifting? Was it...
From whence was the power derived?
Obviously, he had the power. He was the publisher.
You have the words.
I picked him as my editor because I saw he was the only guy I ever met who cared as much about writing as me.
That did not mean we agreed about the writing.
And we had terrible fights, really real fights over changes that he wanted and maybe I didn't
want to make and I thought he was wrong.
But you really felt even in the worst of your findings, you felt that he was on thought he was wrong. But you really felt, even in the worst of your findings,
you felt that he was on,
he was thinking about the same book as you were.
And people keep asking me,
the people at Knaft, some of them,
who would see these, hear the shouting and whatever,
why did you keep him as an editor?
He was not the kind of editor
that if he thought a semicolon should be changed to a comma
and you said no, you weren't gonna turn the page
to the next page.
Oh no, you were gonna have to defend your choice.
So that makes you, I felt,
that makes you think about what you're doing.
And I said, that's invaluable because otherwise,
particularly when you become a little well known,
nobody questions you.
Right.
You need, I thought he was a very smart man
and you had to think through why you had done
what you had done that he didn't like
Maybe you concluded he was wrong, but his arguments were had to be dealt with
I imagine you could have seen a scenario in which you had another editor who once you became the man who wrote the power broker
Maybe they didn't push back as much because what do I know? He's Robert Carey, he wrote The Power Broker. But to have someone who was so passionately engaged,
both on a sort of wide structural level,
but also on a minute word to word punctuation point
to punctuation point level must have been everything,
exciting and frustrating and energetic
after you've sat alone in a room for all this time working on your own. Yes, that's right. What you just said. I'd love to ask you if
you would love to talk about it about one of your other key collaborators, your
wonderful research partner. I know. I know, your wife, your long-time wife who's been
with you on this journey for this whole time. What has it been like to have her
by your side in the Hill Country of Texas,
in the LBJ archives, just with you the whole way?
I did the power broker for what I, kiddingly at first said, was the world's smallest advance.
So we lived in a, I was a reporter, lived in a house on Long Island, totally out of money, totally out of money.
And I came home one day and Ina was standing in the driveway and she said, we sold the
house today.
I hadn't even known we were selling the house.
So that got us enough money.
It was before the real estate boom.
We bought the house for $45,000 and we sold it for 70.
That's $25,000.
That got us through one year.
We moved to an apartment in the Bronx,
but I had hardly started with the book.
And it was very hard on her.
She didn't tell me at the time
that she had to keep changing stores
because we couldn't, we were in a bill,
but she wasn't really a researcher then.
She, what she did, mostly did on the power broker was typing.
But then when we started this Johnson book, I came home one day and I said,
we moved to a house on the edge of the hill country.
And I said to her one day, I'm not understanding these people, the people of
the hill country and the women of the hill country.
Cause most of them, they were all widows.
Men had mostly died.
And I said, we're going to have to move there. And she just said, great.
And then I ran into, I couldn't get the women to talk to me.
They had lived lives. If a moment, of such.
You said, okay, here's a woman who was in high school class of Lyndon Johnson, you're
going to interview her.
So she agrees after a lot of calls to be interviewed.
She said, and the directions are something like you go 43 miles on route 22, look out for the cattle crossing on the left,
turn left, and then you go like 18 miles on a rutted thing.
And at the end of it is a house.
And you suddenly realize you haven't passed the house
since you left the highway.
And they didn't get telephones until the,
a lot of them varied year by year,
until the 1948, 47, 48.
So they lived lives of what loneliness and isolation.
They weren't used to talking to strange men,
particularly someone from New York City
with an accent, I suppose, like mine.
You have an accent?
Yeah.
And, but I, so I said to Ina, could you try?
And she revealed a real genius for interviewing.
They weren't very friendly, so we had three fig trees on our property.
So she made fig preserves.
She learned how to make fig preserves and she
cut with a jar of fig preserves to these women. And she came back with the most wonderful stories
and understanding of the lives of these people that are now embodied in my book.
And then I realized I have on my hands here, a great researcher and Bill Moyers won't talk
to me.
And it was important to me that he talk to me because for about 18 months he was the
person closest to Lyndon Johnson.
Johnson regarded him almost as a son. So, Ina is doing research in papers,
and she does the, I sent her up to Theodore H. White,
who wrote the ranking of the president,
he gave his papers to Boston University.
So I asked Ina to go up and go through his papers,
and she's gone for about two weeks,
and I said, I think you've got everything you have to.
And I remember Ronnie saying, I have the feeling
that if I just keep going, there's something there
and she wouldn't come home.
And as it turns out, David Halberstein,
who Moyers did talk to at great length,
had given his notes to Theodore H. White and they were
in Theodore H. White's papers. So although Bill Moyers won't talk to me, a lot of
what he told David Halberstein and I can't tell you over and over again
she would say something like, I just have the feeling there's something else. And she's
just great. Now, I can't talk about Anna without saying she turned out to be not only a great
researcher but a wonderful writer. We go to, she fell in love with France and she's written
two books, The Road from the Past and Paris to the past about traveling around France
and knowing its history and how much it adds to it.
They're wonderful books.
So I had to learn about Ina,
who I had met when we were both very young, very gradually.
Does she, as much as you must talk about LBJ at home,
is she like, all right, you have your thing now,
let me tell you all about France.
Yes.
But we drive her, I'm her chauffeur in France.
Very nice.
I drive her hundreds, my image of France
is us being in a hotel in some remote place
and being woken up by the rattle of maps
and there's Ines sitting with maps.
And she says says 180 kilometers
isn't too far to drive for lunches.
This is how you pay her back for all the wonderful help she's given you over the years.
One of the ways that you have been able to write these books is through looking through
papers.
Yes.
I wonder often about the difficulty of what it will be like to write biography of modern
of people right now who don't have papers.
You write emails, those emails, you write a letter over email that's sent to someone,
they respond over email, there's no carbon, there's no trace of that anywhere.
Yeah, I think that's it.
And you bring that up, no one mentions that you just brought up. What I think is a terribly significant thing.
Like president Obama talks about his library being all digital.
That sounds good, except someone has to decide what's digitized.
Uh, then someone's making the decision as to what they want you to see. I don't mean this
Nefariously, I don't know what I certainly I think in which it's gonna change history a lot
I can't tell you the Johnson library says they have 44 million documents. I think it's 45 million now I
Can't tell you you just make yourself sit there and say, I had an
editor, my first editor is the guy who said turn every page. I've never forgotten that.
And the fact is that he was right. And I can't tell you how many times there are files in
the Johnson line. It's not very, not always very, they didn't keep
a very good file system when he was in Congress, and that hasn't been improved over the years.
And you say, oh, God, there's a file folder here called General Unarranged, and it's about
eight inches thick.
And you say, this is going to take three, let's say three weeks. And you say,
that's three weeks of your life and you're getting older, Bob. Are you just wasting three
weeks of your life? And I can't tell you how many times I've said to myself, no, turn every
page. And I can't tell you how many times you find what you're looking for
as you're going through this mass of stuff with nothing interesting and suddenly what you're
looking for is there. I just keep thinking about how much focus it must take to be engaged in the
file folder over five hours or whatever and you you know, it's easy to get bored,
and maybe that one moment you look away
and you're turning a page and you miss something,
you just, you have to focus that entire time.
Yeah, that's the story, yes.
I can't tell you how many times you say to yourself,
shmuck, you know, Or you say in a serious way, you're getting older,
you won't finish these books.
You've been on this chapter looking at papers
for six weeks now, you found nothing.
Stop.
And then you say, but John Connolly told you,
see at the beginning, everybody said,
Lyndon Johnson never wrote anything down.
Now John Connolly, who was later the governor of Texas, the secretary of treasury, said,
no, that's not always right.
And I said, Lyndon Johnson rose to power because in the 1940 elections, when he's still, how
old is he, then 29, he suddenly is the guy giving money out to congressmen.
And I asked John, I said,
do you think there's any rec secretary, Connolly,
do you think there's any record of that?
He said, oh yeah, there's something called John's Lists.
I said, where are there?
And I don't remember what he said,
but he basically said something, oh I don't remember what he said, but he basically said something,
oh, I don't know, he stuffed it in these file folders
called General Underwood.
So I'm looking, as you said,
and you gotta keep your focus on it,
and you're sick of it, you're sick of it.
You've been doing it for two weeks now.
And all of a sudden, there it is,
the most amazing four pages,
stapled together.
They're three, they're typed by John Connolly
or by Johnson's other assistant, Walter Jenkins,
in 1940, in October 1940, before the election.
And they all list of what congressmen are asking
Lyndon Johnson to give them in money.
So there are three tight columns.
In the left hand column is the name of the congressman.
In the center column is what he needs the money for.
Lyndon, I need poll watches.
Or Lyndon, one more round of ads will do it.
Give me 1500, what they, and then on the right,
Connolly typed in how much they're
asking for, the amounts are so small compared to $1500 or something like that. But in the left hand
margin, in handwriting, Lyndon Johnson's handwriting is what he decided, or if he was going to give him
the full amount that they asked for, it was okay. If he was going to give them the full amount that they asked for, it was okay.
If he was going to give them part of the amount, he'd write, okay, 500, or, but sometimes he'd
write no, and sometimes he'd write no out.
So I said to Connolly, what did know out mean? And I still remember he said,
it meant he was never getting any money from Lyndon Johnson.
Lyndon never forgave and he never forgot.
Then you say, where did he get this money?
Okay.
So I said, I'm going through the rest of this file.
And all of a sudden, many documents,
oh, excuse me, I exaggerate, it's on another file, also
labeled General Unarranged, but in the same box.
There's a telegram from George Brown of Brown and Root, the huge Texas contractors who were
funding Lyndon Johnson and giving him the money for this congress. And it said, Lyndon, the checks
should have been received yesterday. And on the bottom, Lyndon Johnson writes, I am not
acknowledging any of these men, so tell them verbally, thank you. And there's a list of the men who gave each $5,000.
And Johnson, when he's, this is still, it's either in his first term as congressman or
in second, I have to think for a second.
He said he's never going to get power.
He says it's too slow in Congress.
Seniority counts and he's the most junior congressman.
But he thinks if a lot of money down in Texas, they want things from the federal government,
they want the oil depletion allowance, they want contracts to build roads.
And so if I can get, he basically says, if I can get them to give the money through me
and through nobody else, then I will have power.
So I need two things.
I need the money, which he got from Brown and Root,
and I need the congressmen to know
they want the Texas money, they're gonna have to come to me.
And in one instant, Lyndon Johnson, Jr. as he is,
is a force in Washington.
You tell those stories so well in your books
and you elicited that information so well
because the way you write
and the way that you interview people.
And I wanna end this interview
by asking a question that has
almost nothing to do with your books.
You once said two, you took lessons from two of fiction's greatest interviewers,
George Siminyons, Inspector McGray, and John Le Carre's George Smiley.
Yes.
And you talk about how Inspector McGray, I think he sits there, George Smiley
wipes his glasses and waits for someone to spill their guts. I want to know as we close this out what you have and continue to read for pleasure.
What are you reading when you're not spending eight hours
waiting for your eyes to fall out while you're looking through file folders?
The two that you mentioned, I read John Le Carre, I love him, and I love Simonon's May Gray.
I read John Le Carre, I love him, and I love Simonon's May Gray. I found in later life, but I must say I found that through Ina also, Anthony Trollope, the
19th century British novelist.
I majored in English literature at Princeton.
We didn't read one book of Trollope's.
Ina was doing research for me in the Truman Library and someone had, she stayed
in a boarding house out there, a kind of place where people left their books and she said,
well now I'm reading the greatest political novel I ever read. It's the Prime Minister by Anthony
Trollop. I didn't believe that, but when she came back, I started reading it and I said, it is a great,
so I'm now read 23 spot travel books.
Robert Caro, 50th anniversary of the power broker.
It continues to sit in works of nonfiction,
works of history, and I'd argue works of literature
as one of the greats of the past half century.
It has been a delight to have you on the Book Review Podcast. Thank you for joining us.
Thank you.
That was my conversation with Robert Caro about his magnificent book, The Power Broker,
which is celebrating its 50th anniversary this fall. I'm Gilbert Cruz, editor of the
New York Times Book Review. Thanks for listening.