12 pounds ! Readers usually measure in pages, but that’s the weight of the 4 amazing books Robert Caro has written about Lyndon Baines Johnson, LBJ, the 36th president of the USA.
Though I do love history, I can balk at starting a tome, looking at its mass like a career move, but Caro puts forward a great introduction to ‘The Path to Power’, the first volume. That had me convinced to dive in !
That was followed by great early chapters on an overview of the history of Texas, the Civil War, the wild frontier, what made Texans an independent sort, followed up the ‘trap’ ..of trying to live in the Texas Hill country for an average settler. It’s like a siren, it looks pretty, and has a sweet song, but the variations of soil for growing makes it risky and especially the gyrations of rainfall, adequate for a few years, then drought, all lead to many a farmer dependent on the bank.
LBJ grew up in the middle of all this and it formed his family psyche as well as the people of the entire region.
Caro thoroughly describes LBJ’s upbringing, which has additional fun for me as I live in this area, so it’s interesting to see itty bitty towns mentioned that no one outside of here have ever heard about.
There are politicians and then there are political creatures. Not all politicians are the creature type, that is, someone who knows how to make things work, how to network, and most importantly how to get others to do what you want, and with the super egos of this type of person, the most effective is one who can get you to do want they want, but not have you realize it. That takes restraint and the undying desire for power.
Nowadays we call it ‘The Swamp’, in previous times it was ‘the smoke filled backroom’, there may be a few hundred, maybe a couple thousand, but these political creatures, not always elected, are the ones running any country, and LBJ was thoroughly a political creature, you must have no allegiances in your heart, towards causes or people, though you will have them for show, and to get elected, and you will do anything…anything…to get ahead.
LBJ fixed, yes stole, 2 elections as a young man at college and while as a congressional secretary. They were minor elections, but it showed his aptitude and skill of using systems and people to fill the ballot box his way. With recent (2020) election controversies in the US, it’s a wonder if this book could even be published today showing, yes it happens, and it’s not rare.
Author Caro does a splendid, and readable, job of describing LBJ’s path to power in the region, how he helped get the Marshall Ford dam (now called Buchanan) built, which ensured a steady flow of campaign cash for him and his party for his entire future. LBJ pioneered the transferring of big amounts of money nefariously into various elections. Though many found him unlikeable, many found him indispensable at election time.
Gee I want to keep this review shorter than the book…there are great tales of the personalities of the era, FDR, Sam Rayburn, and his to be wife, Lady Bird. The one fault would be Caro is obviously, totally, slobbering, adoring of FDR, his policies, and the New Deal, so that puts a tint on his judgement, but the LBJ perspective is fascinating, on to volume 2, which starts with the World War 2 years, “Means of Ascent” .