
Means of Ascent The Years of Lyndon Johnson II
Reviews

This was probably the best-researched, most intriguing political biography I have ever read. Caro makes a very distinct chapter of LBJ’s life fit into his larger narrative very well, and the audacity of the central campaign is a startling story of which I was completely unaware. The depiction of both sides of the Stevenson vs Johnson race is a truly incredible tale.

Masterpiece. Especially like the portion where Johnson had to deal with the “stolen election “ claims for his Texas governer race in 1948

That damn Lyndon was selfish and power hungry. He was mean to Lady Bird. He changed the way elections are handled (turned them so nasty). He was used crooked ways to win his elections. Yeah, I know, civil rights. And I'm glad he eventually did some good. But he just makes me a bit nauseated.

Volume two of the series was published in 1990 and is by far the shortest in the series at 459 pages. It covers just seven years of Lyndon's life and only a few primary topics: his WWII service, the building of his personal wealth, and the election of 1948 that propelled him to the Senate. Most interesting here in volume two, and taking up over 200 pages of the book, was that stolen election. The Democratic primary pitted Lyndon against legendary governor Coke Stevenson. (And whoever won the primary would easily win the general election for the Senate seat.) Caro dove deeply to reveal the thousands of votes that Lyndon bought, stole, and bullied for. And only Caro could make a Senate primary so dramatic; I of course knew the ending of the story, and yet I sort of turned the pages on pins and needles, thinking Johnson just had to lose. But he didn't. He won. This particular book is more a work of journalism than biography. Groundbreaking at the time, but for today, it gets the only "4" of the series.













