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Robert A. Caro

Biography

Robert A. Caro

For his biographies of Robert Moses and Lyndon Johnson, Robert A. Caro has twice won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography, has three times won the National Book Critics Circle Award, and has also won virtually every other major literary honor, including the National Book Award, the Gold Medal in Biography from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the Francis Parkman Prize, awarded by the Society of American Historians to the book that best “exemplifies the union of the historian and the artist.”

In 2010, President Barack Obama awarded Caro the National Humanities Medal, stating at the time: “I think about Robert Caro and reading THE POWER BROKER back when I was 22 years old and just being mesmerized, and I’m sure it helped to shape how I think about politics.” In 2016, he received the National Book Award for Lifetime Achievement. The London Sunday Times has said that Caro is “[t]he greatest political biographer of our times.”

Robert A. Caro

Books by Robert A. Caro

by Robert A. Caro - Memoir, Nonfiction

For the first time in book form, Robert Caro gives us a glimpse into his own life and work in these evocatively written, personal pieces. He describes what it was like to interview the mighty Robert Moses; the combination of discouragement and exhilaration he felt confronting the vast holdings of the Lyndon B. Johnson Library in Austin, Texas; his encounters with witnesses, including longtime residents wrenchingly displaced by the construction of Moses' Cross-Bronx Expressway and Lady Bird Johnson acknowledging the beauty and influence of one of LBJ's mistresses. He gratefully remembers how, after years of working in solitude, he found a writers' community at the New York Public Library, and details the ways he goes about planning and composing his books.

by Robert A. Caro - Biography, History, Nonfiction, Politics

The fourth volume in Robert A. Caro’s series on Lyndon Johnson follows Johnson through some of the most frustrating and triumphant periods of his career, including his battle against Robert Kennedy during the 1960 Democratic nomination for president and Johnson’s own unhappy vice presidency.

by Robert A. Caro - Biography, History, Nonfiction

One of the Modern Library’s hundred greatest books of the 20th century, 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. 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. Smith and Franklin D. Roosevelt (and the genesis of their blood feud), about Fiorello La Guardia, John V. Lindsay and Nelson Rockefeller.