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fetch@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 6 months ago

buying books is my favorite hobby 積ん読

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2025 Reading Goal

16% complete! fetch has read 2 of 12 books.

Ethan Elkind: Railtown (Paperback, 2014, University of California Press) 4 stars

The familiar image of Los Angeles as a metropolis built for the automobile is crumbling. …

Review of 'Railtown'

4 stars

A good summary of the post Pacific Electric era of transit in LA COUNTY (important distinction). It's written in a direct style, and doesn't have as many personal accounts as I would have liked, but covers all the bases. It also explains why the system is so hap hazard and things weren't built when you would expect them to.

I was/am a big supporter of Metro, I even rode on the opening day of the Expo line to Santa Monica! But I don't think I could've read this while I was still living there. My support was external, internally I was constantly frustrated with it. Reading about how Metro essentially treated the bus system a lower tier thing matched with my experiences (being the one who volunteered to stand at the back doors of an ancient bus to close the doors at each stop so the operator didn't have to …

reviewed The passage of power by Robert A. Caro (The years of Lyndon Johnson)

Robert A. Caro: The passage of power (Hardcover, 2012, Alfred A. Knopf) 5 stars

Continues Johnson's career from the 1960 elections through his vice presidency to the first months …

Review of 'The Passage of Power'

5 stars

It'll be strange not having the TYOLJ on my mind or on my 'To Read' shelf; I spent basically the past year reading all of Robert Caro's work and his writing single-handedly renewed my interest in books, and exposed me to not just different genres of books but to different perspectives as well. The fifth book is the only book I've ever looked forward to.

As for The Passage of Power, it was a solid story, as expected. The detail and writing style really feels like someone who was there for the entire thing has sat you down and is telling it to you personally. My only hiccups were that the section where the actual passage of the tax and civil rights bills happened felt rushed, but I guess the mechanics of the vote weren't really the point in this book like they were in Master of the Senate.

Ignoring …

quoted The passage of power by Robert A. Caro (The years of Lyndon Johnson)

Robert A. Caro: The passage of power (Hardcover, 2012, Alfred A. Knopf) 5 stars

Continues Johnson's career from the 1960 elections through his vice presidency to the first months …

Feeling, as a friend wrote, that "debt had robbed him of his youth and education," the "characteristic that distinguished him above anything else [was]" that "extreme obsessive hatred of debt," his "fixation" on frugality. The words he used on the subject had an almost religious intensity. "Improvident political promises and programs are sinful," he said once. "They are perpetrated on innocent citizens by demagogues."

The passage of power by  (The years of Lyndon Johnson) (Page 469)

Childhood trauma rears its head again

quoted The passage of power by Robert A. Caro (The years of Lyndon Johnson)

Robert A. Caro: The passage of power (Hardcover, 2012, Alfred A. Knopf) 5 stars

Continues Johnson's career from the 1960 elections through his vice presidency to the first months …

"It was his most tenaciously maintained secret: a tenderness so rawly exposed, so vulnerable to painful abrasion, that it could only be shielded by angry compassion at human misery, manifest itself in love and loyalty toward those closet to him," Richard Goodwin says.

The passage of power by  (The years of Lyndon Johnson) (Page 235)

something that resonated