On the one hand, this is a good, if somewhat standard-issue, history of the development of Washington, the nation's capital. On the other hand, it's almost entirely focused on Washington-as-national-capital not the Washington that the majority of its residents know and understand. Which is to say, it's primarily preoccupied with white, political Washington, not with black DC. I get it -- people want to know the stories of national politics, founding fathers, etc. etc. But I can't rate the book more highly because I feel like any book that seeks to profile this city fully (which this tries to do) needs to do a better job of incorporating both pieces of its history and character, particularly given how de-centered, ignored and marginalized DC has been at the expense of Washington throughout its history.
So, for example, there is extensive treatment in the book of the development of the downtown/Mall area of the city, Georgetown, Capitol Hill, Dupont Circle and the Massachusetts Ave corridor of the city, somewhat less discussion of the U Street corridor and Shaw, primarily as places where black Washingtonians went to socialize in pre-integration DC, and almost no mention at all of any other part of the city. The words "Anacostia" and "Barry Farm" get mentioned in exactly one place in the book, as a development championed by Oliver Otis Howard, the (white) president of Howard University and champion of black advancement during Reconstruction. Other large segments of black DC, including Brookland, Fort Totten, Brightwood and (my own) Petworth never even merit a single reference. It's as if virtually all of eastern DC doesn't exist for the author, which sadly recreates the image of Washington in the minds of many readers.
The book's treatment of history does the same -- there's plenty of detail about Washington's plans for the city, the machinations of various city planners (starting with Pierre L'Enfant) and the obstructionism of Congress. And there are some nods to black slaves and freedmen in the antebellum period, and then to black communities in the city in the post-War period. But they're treated almost exclusively as objects, people acted upon rather than individuals and groups with distinct perspectives, identities, goals and actions. So there will be 90 percent discussion of what white people did, and then 10 percent reflection on how this affected the black community.
It's not until the civil rights era that we get some discussion of black leaders and black-led activities in the city, but even then it's restricted to the well-worn examples of art/cultural heroes (Duke Ellington, Langston Hughes), religious leaders, civil rights leaders (MLK, Stokely Carmichael), and just two black political figures (Walter Washington and Marion Berry). It feels like a sop thrown in in the name of inclusion, rather than a truly curious investigation into what the city means and has meant for the majority of the people who actually live in it.
OK so in terms of its coverage, I'd say the book is relatively good on the post-colonial to World War II period, but gets a little broad-strokes from there forward. It largely repeats the pretty trite (and I'd say pretty racist) mantra about the fate of American cities in the second half of the 20th century: "the Civil Right era started pretty well with buttoned-down MLK, but after he died (!) and blacks got uppity and violent, everything just went to hell." There are some nods in here to the effects of racist policies around housing, segregated communities and the reaction of whites to the repeal of Jim Crow and school desegregation, but it just feels like the bare minimum coverage needed to forestall complaints, not like the author is terribly interested in it. Frankly you could likely get better out of a middle school history book.
What's fascinating to me is that the book makes virtually no mention of any specific events after about 1969 -- it all kind of gets heuristic and hand wavy, like after the riots following MLK's assassination and the flight of white residents to the suburbs, things just stopped happening. The last chapter does cover the establishment of limited home rule in the city, the opening of the Metro (which the author praises as a gem of city planning and efficiency, marking him clearly as not being a Washingtonian!), the defeat of plans to build an inner loop highway around the city. Notable events the book, published in 2012, does not cover include: the national bicentennial celebrations in '76, the DC sniper attacks, the Million Man March, and the friggin 9/11 attacks! Again similar to a high-school history class, it feels like the author used most of his time and intention to treat distant subjects that felt safe, already well-framed and sufficiently sanitized by time, and avoided a lot of the more interesting parts of DC's recent history.
OK so there's a lot of discussion about city planning and building design and construction in here, which for a city like Washington makes sense given how purposefully it was designed as a showpiece. In the same vein as my previous critique, I do find it curious that the author can spend chapters talking ad nauseum about the development (and de-development, and subsequent re-development, etc.) of the Capitol, the White House and Pennsylvania Avenue, but doesn't find space to mention more recent, but still undoubtedly massively important, architectural additions like the Kennedy Center, the MLK Library, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the Dulles Terminal, and the Hirshhorn museum. Apparently if it doesn't have Greek columns it doesn't rate space in this book.
OK so those are my gripes. If you're looking for a pretty vanilla history of the part of Washington most (white) Americans think about when they think about our nation's capital, replete with details about Congressional scandals, foibles of Presidents and their families, and obscure bureaucratic tales of why buildings got sited in one place rather than another, then brother, this is the book for you. It is well-written, I'll give it that. It's easy to read, and for what it discusses it's well researched. I didn't think it was a waste of my time, and I'd recommend it on a qualified basis, but I think it does a disservice by reinforcing the idea that Washington is merely the capitol of our country, and failing to treat seriously the other part of its history, character and identity, one that has historically been ignored and marginalized. Too bad.