Robert Caro's new history of LBJ offers a mistaken account of the Cuban Missile Crisis
He is one of our greatest historians. So why is his retelling of the Cuban Missile Crisis so mistaken?
By Fred Kaplan | Posted Thursday, May 31, 2012, at 7:45 PM ET
Robert Caro’s series on
The Years of Lyndon Johnson, now in its
fourth volume (with, the author’s health willing, one more to go) ranks
among the towering achievements in literary biography. Volume 1,
The Path to Power,
tracing the future president’s youth, may be the best book ever written
about the role of money in American politics. Volume 2,
Means of Ascent, while
deeply flawed, is a seminal study in corruption. Volume 3,
Master of the Senate, is a riveting portrait of how LBJ transformed a deliberately sluggish institution into a vehicle for self-aggrandizement
and social justice.
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