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About the Author

Gary Rivlin is the author of Fire on the Prairie, Drive By (a NewYork Times Notable Book of the Year) and The Plot to Get Bill Gates. A Two-time Gerald Loeb Award winner, he has been a reporter for the New York Times Chicago Reader and other publications and his articles have appeared in the New show more York Times Magazine, Newsweek Wired and elsewhere. show less

Includes the name: Gary Rivlin

Image credit: Photograph by Cathrine Westergaard

Works by Gary Rivlin

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Newsweek | May 23 & 30, 2011 | The Good Wife 2012 (2011) — Contributor — 1 copy

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18 reviews
Harold Washington, the first Black mayor of Chicago, is center to this narrative of big city politics in the 1970s and 1980s. Rivlin establishes the background by detailing the rise of machine politics under long-time mayor Richard J. Daley. The Chicago machine makes what I know of similar operations in Boston and New York look like amateur hour, and machine politics persisted in Chicago under Daley decades after it died out in other cities.

While Daley was responsible for perpetuating the show more segregation and inequality of Black Chicagoans, he was also wise enough to bring leaders from Black wards into his machine, thus making it difficult for a reform candidate to gain support among Black voters. In 1979, Daley protege Jane Byrne ran an anti-machine campaign for mayor and upon election turned her back on reformers and the Black community. This set the stage for Harold Washington to make his historic run in 1983.

Rivlin details the ins and outs of the Democratic primary among Washington, Byrne, and the young Richard M. Daley, running for the first time to follow in his father's footsteps. After Washington squeaks out a primary victory, the Democrats failed to support his campaign in the general election, with many white voters rallying to lift up the previously moribund campaign of Washington's Republican opponent. With a massive turnout of Black voters and the help of Latin and some progressive white voters, Washington once again eked out a victory.

Jesse Jackson is an interesting figure in all of this as the most prominent African American leader in Chicago. He proves to actually be somewhat unpopular among Black Chicagoans both for his shameless self-promotion (several times he tries to get himself into a prominent spot to be seen on tv with Washington during the campaign) and his lack of knowledge of local concerns. Jackson actually performs poorly in the 1984 Democratic primary in Chicago compared to other Black Democratic cities.

The celebration of Washington's victory was short as a block of 29 city councilor's organized to oppose his every proposal. The Council Wars dominate much of Washington's first term. Many of the strategies used to disrupt Washington's agenda are very similar to what Republicans would later do to Barack Obama. The Black community is also frustrated by Washington's commitment to reaching out to white Chicagoans and being "fairer than fair" rather helping them take the share of the spoils they'd been so long denied.

Nevertheless, Washington is able to make some progress and win a second term in 1987. Sadly the momentum and the council majority were cut short by Washington's sudden death in November 1987.

I was a bit disappointed that this book largely focuses on the political horse race. I would've liked to learn more about Washington, his accomplishments, and legacy in Chicago. Nevertheless, this is a compelling narrative of city politics and the racial conflicts of Chicago.
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½
Katrina: After the Flood is perhaps one of the best non-fiction books I've read in a long time. When I picked it up initially, I thought based on the description that it would be a factual account of the days, months, and years following the hurricane. While it did offer a factional account of events, the real story ended up being a series of human interest tales woven around the events and politics that surrounded the flood. I thought that Rivlin chose his characters well and that they show more represented a broad spectrum of people, and neighborhoods, after the storm. The prose was well-written and the story ended up being an all encompassing page-turner that I didn't put down all weekend. If anything, it's inspired a new love for the city that culture around my home revolved around throughout my youth. I know from family members that Katrina changed New Orleans, but I haven't been since the storm. I will go now with more context for what I see. show less
I did like this book, but I am not rating it higher because, well, "I liked it" but I did not "really like it." It is not because the book is bad. Far from it. If a list is ever compiled of the books that must be read to understand the 2008 financial meltdown, this book has to be among the top two or three. Also, the book is required reading to understand why the poverty industry-- those who profit from the plight of the poor-- are thriving in the United States. So, why only rate it "three show more stars"? Because the book is exhaustive, but it is also exhausting.

Rivlin takes us on a gran tour of Poverty Inc. He covers just about every player: payday loans, rent-to-own, those tax refund loans, pawn shops, subprime mortgages and a few others I cannot recall at this moment. He delivers human interest stories, interviewing a lot of victims, but he also sits down with some of the tycoons of these companies. Though Rivlin strives to be fair, in the end, the tycoons pretty much hang themselves. As we read, it is clear that what they do is far from noble, and we are reading a tale of greed gone awry. The damage these companies caused is such that it will be felt for years. And even if you are tempted to feel bad about one of these tycoons, once you learn of their trade conventions, where they trade secrets on how to squeeze the poor even more, their lobbyists, and their underhanded tactics, you won't be left feeling too much sympathy for them.

The thing is that there were very early warning signs, signs that many people either failed to see, or they refused to see them because the money being made was very good. In the end, the companies may be bruised, but they are not totally out yet. We can only hope more education can help the poor find better options. Because in the end, these companies thrive because society and businesses have simply enabled the erosion of a solid middle-class turning it into a working poor class with no other choice than to fall into the trap of the subprime lender or other poverty exploitation merchant. Rivlin, in addition to telling the story, raises some very good ethical and moral questions that we as a society really need to consider if we want to move forward.

The book includes a good set of notes for documentation for those who may be interested in learning more. The only catch, as I said, is that Rivlin strives to cover so much that after a while reading these tragic stories of exploited people just becomes too exhausting. Add to it you may get angry (as a decent human being) when you read about these predatory lenders and their deceptions, and you have to read this book a little at a time. However, it is an important book, and I think it is one more people should read. Plus, in an election season, it may be a relevant one as well.
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A terrific read. What Rivlin has done and no one else has even tried, as far as I know, is to tell the story of New Orleans from the point of view of its black business people, such as the banker Alden McDonald. There is a very good map at the beginning of the book, but the half star deduction is for the complete lack of photographs, less of the city than the people he writes about. We visited New Orleans three times recently, once in 2008 and once in each of the next two years. We stayed at show more the Olivier House, which is near Bourbon Street in the French Quarter and is a nice old ruin of a hotel. The food is terrific and the author probably should have included Donald Link in his writing, since this white local chef opened up three great places in town right after Katrina, two of which we go to every time we are in the city, Cochon and Herbsaint. The place is totally unique among American cities, not because it is surrounded by water, but because it is very European in feel, not surprising since it was first settled by the French and Spanish. When we were there, we saw lots of houses that were marked for destruction in the lower lying parts of town, indicating that the author is correct when he notices the lack of a complete city mostly due to the efforts of the locals to prevent blacks from moving back. The cops from Gretna, a white suburb, are racist idiots and should have been arrested and sentenced to long prison terms. along with their bosses. This is essential New Orleans reading. show less
½

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