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   Book Info

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Lone Star Rising: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1908-1960, Vol. 1  
Author: Robert Dallek
ISBN: 0195054350
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
Dallek sums up his subject, the 36th U.S. president, in this generous and touching sentence: "If Lyndon Johnson demanded much and took much, he also gave much in return." In the initial book of this two-volume biography, Dallek ( Franklin D. Roosevelt and American Foreign Policy, 1932-1945 ) reconstructs Johnson's Texas childhood, his 1937 election to the House, his war experiences as a Navy officer, election to the Senate in '49, his years as "the greatest Senate majority leader in history," and finally his selection as John Kennedy's running mate in 1960. LBJ as wheeler-dealer is already a familiar figure, but Dallek, tracing the origin of the War on Poverty and the Great Society to Johnson's experiences and observations as a young man, reveals that much of the wheeling and dealing was an expression of Johnson's genuine interest in helping the disadvantaged. One of our least-admired presidents, Johnson (1908-1973) has been portrayed in recent years by Robert Caro and others as a monster of ambition, greed and cruelty. Dallek's LBJ is a somewhat more complicated, contradictory and sympathetic character, "struggling with inner demons that drove and tormented him." Photos. 50,000 first printing; $60,000 ad/promo. Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal
Dallek, a historian best known for his studies of American foreign policy, has taken on Robert Caro's formidable work ( The Years of Lyndon Johnson , Vol. 1: The Path to Power , LJ 12/15/82; Vol. 2: Means of Ascent , LJ 4/15/90) with this solid biography. Like Caro's, this is a work in progress--the first of two volumes. However, Dallek offers a more focused, balanced, and traditional view of Johnson, and his work may emerge as the standard LBJ biography after the controversy over Caro's approach has waned. Dallek acknowledges and documents Johnson's darker, "self-serving impulses" but also emphasizes his deep "concern for the national well-being." From this perspective, his view of LBJ is similar to that of Doris Kearns Goodwin's Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream ( LJ 6/1/76). Dallek, however, has had greater access to papers in the LBJ Library, supplemented by at least 100 other manuscript collections and oral histories. His work is the product of seven years of careful research, and the concluding volume will be eagerly awaited. Highly recommended for academic and most public libraries.- Thomas A. Karel, Franklin & Marshall Coll. Lib., Lancaster, Pa.Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Kirkus Reviews
Readers who find Robert A. Caro's LBJ too Manichaean can turn to this hefty study (first of a projected two volumes), which covers the life and career of the young politico-in-a-hurry through the 1960 election. UCLA historian Dallek (Ronald Reagan, 1984; The American Style of Foreign Policy, 1983) believes that Johnson's current low esteem (a 1988 Harris poll ranked him at or near the bottom of 11 categories among recent Presidents) reflects one-dimensional portraits that highlight his pettiness and slight his tremendous achievements. In Dallek's view, LBJ was a ``liberal nationalist'' who consistently backed laws that boosted the fortunes of America's disadvantaged, as well as ``the greatest [Senate] Majority Leader in American history.'' This biography supplements Caro's in several crucial respects, including fuller discussions of LBJ's early, albeit halting, efforts on behalf of blacks, and of the rough-and- tumble Texas political wars, including Johnson's disputed 1948 Senate race (conservative opponent Coke Stevenson is not, in this telling, the good government pillar of Means of Ascent). Yet Dallek sometimes belabors the obvious in detailing Johnson's legislative wizardry (the founding of NASA, the first civil-rights act since Reconstruction, the indispensable bipartisan aid for Eisenhower's foreign policy). Solid if redundant on Johnson's sterling legislative record, but nowhere as brilliant as Caro in depicting LBJ's almost demonic energy. For that reason, despite its balance and careful research, it may be, as Dallek hopes, ``the scholarly biography of Johnson for the foreseeable future,'' but certainly isn't the most readable or vivid one. (Thirty b&w photographs--not seen.) -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.




Lone Star Rising: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1908-1960, Vol. 1

ANNOTATION

Robert Dalleck, winner of the prestigious Bancroft Prize, offers a brilliant portrait of one of this century's great American politicians--Lyndon Johnson. The first of a two-volume biography, Lone Star Rising deals with Johnson's childhood through his election to the Vice Presidency under Kennedy. Based on years of manuscript research, oral histories, and numerous personal interviews, this remarkable biography defines Johnson as never before--as a complex and representative figure with a penchant for both good and bad. 30 halftones.

     



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