The passage of power by robert a caro5/26/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() In the course of this book, Johnson is bumped from presumptive 1960 Democratic presidential nominee to the bottom half of John F. In this fourth installment-a comparatively trim 712 pages-the payoff is even greater. They chronicle in exhaustive detail the strengths and flaws of the 36th president of the United States, then surge forward toward a pivotal moment with the full weight of that character study behind them. Caro’s three previous biographical volumes on Johnson will recognize this groundswell-the sudden marshaling of outsized energies-because it is also the pattern of these mammoth, magnificent books. ![]() Thus motivated, he would “get all worked up,” as his longtime lawyer, Ed Clark, put it, “all worked up and emotional, and work all day and night, and sacrifice, and say, ‘Follow me for the cause!’-‘Let’s do this because it’s right!’ ” Once he had finished precisely calibrating the personal costs and benefits, he would begin to gather momentum in a ritual that allies described as “revving up”: the effort to persuade himself of the goodness of his cause, regardless of whether he had previously supported or opposed it. Aides to Lyndon Baines Johnson always knew when their boss had decided to engage in a political battle. ![]()
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