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titan.gif (15971 bytes) Titan : The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr
by Ron Chernow
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Availability: This title usually ships within 24 hours.
Hardcover, 832 pages
Published by Random House
Publication date: May 1998
Dimensions (in inches): 1.89 x 9.57 x 6.70
ISBN: 0679438084

Text Excerpt :
Read the first chapter of this title.

Amazon.com:
Ron Chernow, whose previous books have taken on the Morgan and Warburg financial empires, now turns his attention to the patriarch of the Rockefeller dynasty. John D. was history's first recorded billionaire and one of the most controversial public figures in America at the turn of the 20th century. Standard Oil--which he always referred to as the result of financial "cooperation," never as a "cartel" or a "monopoly"--controlled at its peak nearly 90 percent of the United States oil industry. Rockefeller drew sharp criticism, as well as the attention of federal probes, for business practices like underpricing his competitors out of the market and bribing politicians to secure his dominant market share.

While Chernow amply catalogs Rockefeller's misdeeds, he also presents the tycoon's human side. Making use of voluminous business correspondence, as well as rare transcripts of interviews conducted when Rockefeller was in his late 70s and early 80s, Chernow is able to present his subject's perspective on his own past, re-creating a figure who has come down to us as cold and unfeeling as a shrewd, dryly humorous man who had no inner misgivings about reconciling his devout religious convictions with his fiscal acquisitiveness. The story of John D. Rockefeller Sr. is, in many ways, the story of America between the Civil War and the First World War, and Chernow has told that story in magnificently fascinating depth and style.

The New York Times Book Review, Jack Beatty :
This book is a triumph of the art of biography. Unflaggingly interesting, it brings John D. Rockerfeller Sr. (1839-1937) to life through a sustained narrative portraiture of the large-scale 19th-century kind.

The New Yorker, John Cassidy :
...prodigiously researched ... Chernow surveys almost everything that is already known about his subject ... and also unearths some original material.

Wall Street Journal, Maury Klein :
Past authors have usually cast Rockefeller's life as some sort of morality play. To admirers he was a poster child for the Protestant ethic, with its aura of pious acquisitiveness, indomitable righteousness and relentless energy. To detractors he was a malign, unsleeping engine of greed bent on crushing all who opposed him. Rockefeller's career is a minefield of controversies and complexities through which Mr. Chernow makes his way with admirable balance and judgment. His most important contribution is to place Rockefeller's achievements in the context of the closest examination yet made of a bizarre and improbable life.

Amazon Customer Comments

jcona@nais.com from Long Island, New York , 05/17/98, rating=9:
Excellent as history or as larger-than-life novel.
Finally, a book large enough in scope to cover the complete history of American industrialization - from the post-Civil War boom to modern corporate finance. It is about time someone realized that the history of that whole period can be written as the biography of one remarkable man - Rockefeller. Love that period, love this man - or at least find his (public) life endlessly fascinating. And Chernow brings it all out seamlessly and with attention to detail. A fine history, biography and novel.

A reader from New York, NY , 05/16/98, rating=8:
Excellent research, curious perspective
The New York Times Book Review praises the "moral intelligence" of Ron Chernow's book on John D. Rockefeller. I have a different reaction. The Baptist minister William Sloan Coffin has argued that damaging people is inevitable (since people's interests conflict) and not necessarily evil, but to do damage and call it good is the quintessence of evil. Reading Chernow's book, that phrase kept ringing through my ears. I also found myself remembering Andrew Delbanco's book on Satan, which argues that the traditional image of Satan is today's image of the successful capitalist. Rockefeller exemplifies the terrible arrogance of the self-righteous: His self-image of his goodness licenses his evil. Chernow's groundbreaking book offers much to admire, but "moral intelligence"? I suppose one can see Chernow's "balanced" presentation as some sort of wisdom--unless one believes that, on balance, Rockefeller did a great deal more evil than kindness. Chernow does not make the case that Rockefeller, warts and all, was a good guy. His "balance" seems to me "a priori," a studied professional stance rather than an apt and well-argued appraisal of the facts of Rockefeller's life. I found myself wondering why Chernow was so generally admiring of Chernow. I finished the book more disgusted with Rockefeller than before I knew this much about him.

 

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