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- <text id=89TT2949>
- <title>
- Nov. 13, 1989: A Texas-Size LBJ Obsession
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 13, 1989 Arsenio Hall
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HISTORY, Page 98
- A Texas-Size L.B.J. Obsession
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Robert Caro, 14 years into his biography, traces a web of deceit
- </p>
- <p>By R.Z. Sheppard
- </p>
- <p> Lyndon Baines Johnson may have been larger than life, but
- since his death 16 years ago, he has been getting bigger. The
- growth spurt is due largely to the diligence of Robert A. Caro,
- the biographer and political historian who has made L.B.J.'s
- saga into an obsession and virtually a life's work. Caro is one
- of the best known of a small breed of long-distance writers who
- appear from their orbits of research to offer big books on big
- subjects. Among others in the select group, most of whom tend
- to be, like Caro, journalist-scholars: Richard Kluger, author
- of the civil rights classic Simple Justice (1976), and J.
- Anthony Lukas, whose Common Ground (1985), a social history of
- ethnic Boston, was well worth the wait.
- </p>
- <p> Caro began work on his Texas-size biography of L.B.J. 14
- years ago. The choice of subject was a natural progression from
- his first marathon, The Power Broker (1974), a 1,200-page study
- of New York City master builder Robert Moses. The Power Broker
- is an obligatory book for understanding modern urban politics.
- In turning to L.B.J., Caro shifted his focus from how New York
- City works to what makes the nation run. The answer is not
- surprising. As Franklin Roosevelt's factotum Tommy ("the Cork")
- Corcoran responded when Caro asked how the young L.B.J. gained
- power, "Money, kid. But you'll never be able to write about it."
- </p>
- <p> Caro's first Johnson volume, The Path to Power, was
- published in 1982 and proved Corcoran wrong. In comprehensive
- and forceful detail, it followed Johnson from the lonely Texas
- hill country, out from under the humiliating shadow of his
- failed father. The book ended with his unexpected defeat in a
- 1941 race for the U.S. Senate. The Path remained a best seller
- for three months and won the National Book Critics Circle Award
- for nonfiction.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Volume II, Means of Ascent, began to run in the
- New Yorker. The excerpt details a shameless pattern of deceit
- in L.B.J.'s early career. Among the juicier disclosures is how
- Johnson, as a noncombatant in World War II, was able to parlay
- 13 minutes under enemy fire into a Silver Star, which he then
- had repeatedly presented to himself at public ceremonies. Alice
- Glass, who according to Caro was Johnson's mistress as well as
- the lover of one of his most influential supporters, had a more
- realistic view of Lyndon's war. "I can write a very illuminating
- chapter on his military career in Los Angeles," she later
- revealed to a friend, "with photographs, letters from voice
- teachers, and photographers who tried to teach him which was the
- best side of his face."
- </p>
- <p> As many as six further excerpts are expected to appear in
- the magazine, covering the founding of L.B.J.'s fortune and his
- controversial election to the Senate in 1948. Knopf will issue
- a first printing of 200,000 copies in March.
- </p>
- <p> To Caro, Volume II is already history. He is well into the
- making of Volume III, which will take Johnson from his reign as
- Senate majority leader to his swearing-in as President after
- John F. Kennedy's assassination. A fourth, final volume is
- planned. Meanwhile, the work moves slowly. Caro and his wife
- Ina, who is also his research assistant, spent four years living
- in Texas, driving tens of thousands of miles to interview
- sources. "It took me two years to realize what I was hearing,"
- says Caro. The young Johnson's role in bringing electricity to
- his constituents filled the author with populist enthusiasm. But
- later, going through some of the 34 million documents stored in
- the Johnson Library in Austin, he recalls a letdown. "I thought
- Johnson was going to be like Al Smith. But a different picture
- started to emerge in the library, and I realized, with
- depression coming over me, how he got to be F.D.R.'s man in
- Texas."
- </p>
- <p> Caro insists he is more interested in Johnson's power than
- in his personality. "The basic concern of all my books is how
- political power works in America," he says. "I don't think
- there is an adequate understanding of that. Look at the effect
- Johnson had on so many lives. If you were a young black American
- getting an education, Johnson had a lot to do with that. And if
- you were a young man drafted off to Viet Nam, he had a lot to
- do with that too."
- </p>
- <p> At 53, Caro could spend the rest of his working life
- wrestling with the enigma of L.B.J. With his hefty book contract
- and a $1 million movie deal, he can afford the commitment. Yet
- to see Caro in his Manhattan office, one might think he was a
- struggling small businessman out of the 1950s. He works amid a
- makeshift table, an old desk and stained bookshelves. There is
- no word processor, only an electric portable.
- </p>
- <p> He often observes from the U.S. Senate gallery, where he
- finds the routine business of Government thrilling. Sometimes
- he is an audience of one, as if, he says, "the Senate were being
- staged only for me." Caro is less anonymous at the Johnson
- Library. Since The Path to Power, Lady Bird Johnson has become
- uncooperative, and her former press secretary Liz Carpenter
- occasionally glares from behind a glass wall as Caro makes his
- notes.
- </p>
- <p> Caro is understandably reluctant to give away findings that
- he has worked years to uncover, and for which his publisher and
- the New Yorker have paid good money. When asked about the basis
- of Johnson's wealth or about the 1948 election, the biographer
- responds teasingly, "I think I can add something to our
- understanding." Judging from that answer, the only surprise
- would be if future installments indicated that Johnson got rich
- through his business acumen and won his first Senate term fair
- and square.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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