American Pharoah Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

American Pharoah Book

You might say it took a village to raise this child. Richard Daley and Chicago are inseparable, and it's impossible to discuss one without at least mentioning the other. Consequently, American Pharaoh includes far more material than your average biography; this is as much the story of the city as it is of the man. Covering the years between 1902 and 1976 (that is, between Daley's birth and death), authors Adam Cohen and Elizabeth Taylor show us a life that in some ways symbolizes the American dream: a boy from a poor neighborhood grows up to wield unimaginable power, yet never forgets his roots. But Daley's was a complicated legacy. While filling Chicago with modern architecture and affecting national politics, he was also held responsible for the segregation and police brutality that tore the city apart during the late '60s and early '70s. Throughout the book, Cohen and Taylor remind readers that Daley's real influence came from the powerful political machine he created. When he didn't like guidelines from national agencies, for example, he went directly to the presidents he helped get elected. When he got bad local press, people lost their jobs and his neighbors marched in his support. When Martin Luther King Jr. came to town, he was greeted by a handpicked organization of African American leaders with strong ties to Daley's machine. It's startling to remember that this was simply a local office; the mayor's loyalties and prejudices affected the entire country. American Pharaoh shows politics at its deepest level, and each chapter brings new insights into a complex man and the system he created in order to rule the city that made him. --Jill Lightner Read More

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  • Product Description

    From his election in 1955 until his death in 1976, Mayor Richard J. Daley ruled Chicago with an iron fist. He was a man of profound prejudices who had a deep authoritarian streak, as the nation witnessed when his police officers savagely cracked down on peaceful protesters at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. While he transformed Chicago into a metropolis of skyscrapers, freeways, and a thriving downtown, he also constructed the nations worst ghettos and made Chicago the most segregated city in North America.

  • 0316834033
  • 9780316834032
  • Elizabeth Taylor, Adam Cohen
  • 1 March 2001
  • Little, Brown & Company
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 624
  • First Edition First Printing
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