DISQUS

CapitolFax.com: Question of the day

  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    'Altgeld's America' by Ray Ginger. It's about the Lincoln tradition in Illinois politics.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    Anyone remember the novel about Chicago politics by 'Ward Healer'?
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    Mike Royko's "Boss" is a great explainer of Chicago (and Illinois) politics up thru the first Mayor Daley. Royko was absolutely the best, and the story he tells is a great read, even for a Downstater like myself.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    Some good choices already. But for state government nothing from my perspective can beat 'Mostly Good and Honorable Men', a tome reviewing the state's governors. While it doesn't have Royko's style, it is still a good read.
  • Pat Collins · 4 years ago
    A HISTORY OF ILLINOIS
    From Its Commencement as a State in 1818 to 1847 Thomas Ford.



    Shows you just how nasty politics was back then, and that some things, really don't change.



    And, frankly, a fun read.
  • RodReport · 4 years ago
    Bob Cooley's book "When Corruption Was King" is a great book dealing with the corruption of Judges and politicans in the 70's and 80's. http://whencorruptionwasking.com/
  • Ralph · 4 years ago
    "Cash Clout" Kent Redfield.


    No shoes, no shirt, no service.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    "Lincoln's Preparation for Greatness" by Paul Simon, a history of Lincoln's years in the General Assembly. The more things change, the more they stay the same...
  • Cal Skinner · 4 years ago
    I agree with RodReport. Ex-mob attorney Robert Cooley's book "How I Helped the Mob Rule Chicago, Then Brought Down the Outfied When Corruption Was King" clearly points out how the syndicate, political class, police and labor unions rule our biggest city.


    There are new names in the yesterday's indictment of Outfit folks, but Cooley lays out how things work in Chicago.
  • Bo · 4 years ago
    Rich, how about a good read today?


    "Audit scolds CMS over contracts, questionable cost-cutting"



    I posted the link at my site.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    "American Pharoah" There are interesting sections covering Richard J.'s days in Springfield.
  • DownStateBoyInChicago · 4 years ago
    'American Pharaoh' by Adam Cohen and Elizabeth Taylor. Tells the story of the first Mayor Daley and the controll of Chicago over all of Illinos politics. A good read for anyone north or south of I-80. A little unsettling but an important book to read for those of us who believe that there is more to Illinois than just Chicago.
  • PrairieStateDem · 4 years ago
    Have to agree Royko's Boss is required reading for Illinois politics.


    It does an excellent job of explaining the hows and whys of the RJD era and the imapact on Illinois today is made clear.





    A fun read and even relevant to us downstaters!
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    the title says it all---rakov's great "don't make no waves, don't back no losers"
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    Let's not forget Rakove's other classic:


    We Don't Want Nobodoy Nobody Sent
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    Cooley's book has so many inaccuracies in it, it should be in the fiction section. If you want a great and fast read about how the Daley machine and HDO runs elections, track down Peter Zelchenko's book, It Happened Four Years Ago (or something like that). It was based on countless documents that were inexplicably left behind by Daley campaign workers and provides one of the best insights ever published about City races. If the book has any flaws, it's that the aouthor didn't have the experience to fully piece together some of the things that he found and some of the people who were implicated, which include a number of present public officials.
  • Rich O. · 4 years ago
    I've been meaning to get around to "Mostly Good and Honorable Men"


    One I'd throw in for the sake Lincoln-philes would be "Lincoln's Virtues" by William Lee Miller



    Its a good read and humanizes Lincoln and his times well. It also does a good job portraying Lincoln the politician.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    American Pharoah is good, but another one is
    The Wicked City: Chicago From Kenna to Capone.



    This has a great section on the great confluence of organized crime and politics. It's a great lead-in to American Pharoah.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    Upton Sinclairs "The Jungle"
    Ramifications still felt today...
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    Sort of off-topic, but a great primer on Chicago is Nelson Algren's "prose poem" Chicago: City on the Make. In the 2001 edition, the footnotes alone could be their own history book.
  • ISU College Democrats · 4 years ago
    Don't Make no Waves, Don't Back No Losers. Great read about the old ward politics.
  • Tom DeLay's Mom · 4 years ago
    Boss as the primer to American Pharoah - both are fantastic!
  • IlliniPundit · 4 years ago
    I'd second the nomination for Pharoah. I read it several years ago and it was fascinating.


    I'm going to check out some of these other recommendations that I have missed, too. This is a good list.
  • the Other Anonymous · 4 years ago
    Overall, the best practical (textbook) description of Illinois politics is Jim Nowlan's book in the state series published by the University of Nebraska. It was published in the late 1990s, I believe, so it doesn't capture more recent events (i.e., the shift from swing state to blue state), but it does a great job describing the other forces at work in Illinois.
  • Nuisance Industry · 4 years ago
    David Fremon's Chicago Politics Ward by Ward is fun to read in short spurts, mixing neighborhood history and some of the more lively developments after Washington's death. A fine book for showing how diverse Chicago is...or at least how diverse it was when it was published seventeen years ago.
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    "Mostly Good and Competent Men" is good for quick vignettes. It's also fun to learn about people like Edward Coles, Thomas Ford and Richard Oglesby that you see around the Capitol but rarely hear people talk about.


    But it's hard to top "Boss." I just wish I had time to read half of the books mentioned here...
  • So-Called Austin Mayor · 4 years ago
    My wife is going to kill me for the amount of money I am going to spend on all of your great suggestions.


    By the way, the Jim Nolan book is "Illinois Politics and Government: The Expanding Metropolitan Frontier"

    http://tinyurl.com/9dh27



    "Mostly Good and Competent Men" is available used here: http://tinyurl.com/abh46



    Does
    anyone have a tip on "Peter Zelchenko's book, It Happened Four Years Ago"? I can't find anything under the author's so-called name or the alleged title.
  • So-Called Austin Mayor · 4 years ago
    One more thing -- anyone looking to purchase one of these books this weekend should visit here first:
    http://tinyurl.com/d56vp
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    "RYP R.I.P." an autobiography by Doug Ibendahl
  • Anonymous · 4 years ago
    "It's My Party Now! The Transformation of the Chicago and Illinois Republican Parties" by Ronald Krol, Candidate for 8th Congressional District (coming out June 2005 by Zondervan PresS)
  • BuckTurgidson · 4 years ago
    For a good read on Richard J. Daley -- add Dick Ciccone's bio - it is friendlier than Boss and Pharaoh -- adding some balance -- RJD was an important and successful mayor, in spite of the current fashion for bashing him.


    I'll throw in a plug for Claude Walker's "Currents of Power." IL isn't named - but it is rather obviously our great state depicted in this novel.



    Have to agree with ArchPundit -- gonna spend a lot of dough on many of these great suggestions.
  • Peter Zelchenko · 3 years ago
    Here's a URL with information about my book. Sorry I didn't get this to you sooner. Incidentally, I'm running for 43rd Ward alderman.