Lyndon Johnson and the American dream
Doris Kearns Goodwin.
- New York : St. Martin's Press, 1991.
- xii, 432 p. ; 24 cm.
Main sequence of paging starts with p. 19.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Growing up -- Education and the dream of success -- The making of a politician -- Rise to power in the senate -- The senate leader -- The vice-presidency -- The transition year -- The Great Society -- Vietnam -- Things go wrong -- Under siege in the White House -- The withdrawal -- Epilogue.
Takes us through the vast landscape of Johnson's political and personal life: from his childhood, dominated by an indulgent mother and a hell-raising politico father, through his early political victories and the ideals that inspired them; from the Washington system that trained him, through his election as Vice President and the transitional year, 1964, when JFK's assassination brought him to the highest office in the land; from the remarkable talents that brought him triumph, to the inner demons that tormented him and the flaws that engendered his ultimate tragedy.