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The Life of Nelson A. Rockefeller [Hardcover]

Cary Reich (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

October 1, 1996
A triumph of the biographer's art, The Life of Nelson A. Rockefeller is the first full-length biography of one of the most powerful, magnetic, fascinating figures on the twentieth-century stage.

Of all the great American dynastic families, few could match the combined wealth, power, and influence of the Rockefellers. And of all the Rockefellers, none was more determined to use these advantages than Nelson A. Rockefeller.

Nelson was never content to live off the fame and fortune due him as a Rockefeller. His imperious grandfather, John D. Rockefeller, and intimidating father, John Jr., set standards and boundaries that Nelson blithely ignored. He pushed for position within the family, and then broke a family taboo by taking his ambition to the forbidden world of politics. A devoted family man, he took many lovers with an almost casual sense of droit du seigneur. He surrounded himself with brilliant, devoted subordinates; he flattered and cajoled more powerful people who would also end up serving his needs.

Handsome, ferociously energetic, charming, and ruthless, Rockefeller had a rapacious appetite for life--and for power--that showed itself in the stunning breadth of his activities and in the daring of his ideas. Nelson's sunny, optimistic demeanor masked a Machiavellian mind. At a young age he wrested control of the Rockefeller Center project from his father's minions, turned the Museum of Modern Art into a world-class institution, used a midlevel bureaucratic position during World War II to run the affairs of an entire continent; through pure ego and drive he bent the United Nations conference to his will and redirected the path of history. Nelson A. Rockefeller's fierce drive to achieve would have a profound effect on a city, a state, a nation, and the world.

Cary Reich's masterful biography, eight years in the making, brings this awesome figure to life. Reich enjoyed unprecedented access to the Rockefeller family archives, scrutinized FBI and FOIA files, and interviewed over three hundred individuals for the book, including many who had never spoken about Rockefeller for the record. This two-volume work (the second to appear in 1997) will surely stand alongside the works of Robert Caro, Doris Kearns Goodwin, and David McCullough.

Cary Reich is the author of Financier: The Biography of AndrÚ Meyer. He is the former executive editor of Institutional Investor and has written numerous portraits of the powerful and the wealthy. He is the recipient of numerous journalism awards, including the Overseas Press Award, the Deadline Club Award, and the John Hancock Award for Excellence in Business and Financial Journalism. He lives in New York City.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Proving that the rich are indeed different from you and me, Cary Reich informs us that former New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller's father, John D. Rockefeller Jr., made his children swat flies to earn their allowances, and take long single-file marches with him each Sunday. This account of Rockefeller's seemingly charmed life takes us from his boyhood on the family's estate at Tarrytown, New York to his landslide victory over Averell Harriman in the 1958 governor's race in New York. At that point Rockefeller seemed poised for the presidency--a goal that eluded him for the rest of his life.

From Publishers Weekly

"Looking at Nelson," Reich quotes a colleague as saying, "was like looking up close at an elephant. A lot of us saw a piece of the elephant, and some saw more of the elephant than others. But none of us saw the entire elephant." This elephantine first part of a two-volume life will have readers eager for the other half. No hagiographer, Reich (Financier: The Biography of Andre Meyer) sees "rampant ambition" propelling John D. Jr.'s second son, who refused to be merely one of his father's viceroys in the Rockefeller empire. To leverage his patrimony into external power and influence, he employed a personal engine "perpetually in overdrive," his confidence and his energy nourished by near royal status, extramarital sexual success, pep pills and tranquilizers, and unlimited money. Rockefeller's wealth would buy the industrious and talented staff that could develop ambitious schemes and sustain his frenetic pace in marketing them. In his 20s he was already master of the "awesome limestone forest" that was Rockefeller Center, and the Museum of Modern Art was his personal fiefdom. In his 30s and 40s, in and out of public service, he engineered Roosevelt's wartime Good Neighbor policy in Latin America, ran the Point Four postwar economic program for developing nations, devised U.N. Article 51, which would make collective assistance to invaded South Korea legal, helped create a huge Cabinet department for human services. Yet Rockefeller was increasingly frustrated by his ineffectuality in appointive positions among those he considered political pygmies. At 50, at the close of Reich's absorbing biography, Rockefeller runs for political office for the first time, as the Republican gubernatorial candidate for New York, an office he would hold from 1959 to 1973, in a populist makeover that has him dreaming even of the presidency. Artfully constructed, veined with grand themes, based on prodigious research including more than 350 interviews, this is a definitive portrait. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 896 pages
  • Publisher: Doubleday; 1st edition (October 1, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 038524696X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385246965
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.6 x 2.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #892,098 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An engrossing and suprisingly quick read, May 3, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Life of Nelson A. Rockefeller (Hardcover)
This book was a finalist for the National Book Award and it is easy to see why. Although it is an enormous book--over 700 pages and still only the first volume of this biography--it is an engrossing and amazingly quick read. Rockefeller moved in so many great circles that the book feels more like one about 20th century America than just one man. The author's fascination with Rockefeller is infectious. The fact that Cary Reich died a sudden and untimely death last year, before he could complete volume two, means that readers will be deprived, even if the writer who completes volume two does an equally superb job.
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