Pro Politics with Zac McCrary

Talking Washington Books, with NYT Columnist Carlos Lozada...author of The Washington Book

April 16, 2024 Zac McCrary
Pro Politics with Zac McCrary
Talking Washington Books, with NYT Columnist Carlos Lozada...author of The Washington Book
Show Notes

Carlos Lozada is currently an Opinion columnist at The New York Times, after spending nearly 20 years at The Washington Post - where he earned the Pulitzer Prize in 2019 for criticism as The Post's nonfiction book critic. He's also an author, with his second book -  The Washington Book - recently published: a collection of essays exploring what books by and about D.C. power players reveal about the people and political conflicts that define Washington. In this conversation, Carlos talks his path from Peru to South Bend to D.C., his accidental route to working in the press, some of his favorite Washington books and stories, and deeply mining his own insights into our current political moment.


IN THIS EPISODE

Carlos' personal journey from Lima, Peru to Washington D.C...


Carlos "gateway drug" books into the genre of Washington books...


How Carlos defines what exactly is a "Washington Book"...


Carlos weighs in on what he considers some of the earliest Washington Books...


Carlos' rave  review of the U.S. Grant memoir...


The place of All The President's Men in the pantheon of Washington Books...


Carlos' favorite cliches from presidential campaign memoirs...


The D.C. corridors of power that are undercovered in Washington Books...


The Washington Books that are purely exercises in settling scores...


Carlos compares the Donald Trump of 2016 to the Donald Trump of 2024...


The Washington Books that never were that Carlos would love to read...


What reading Vladimir Putin revealed to Carlos about the Russian leader...


Carlos' 101 on sharp essay-writing...


Carlos waxes nostalgic about the late Washinton Post Outlook Section...


AND The 1619 Project, Alexis de Tocqueville, all sorts of minutia, Jody Allen, the American Enterprise Institute, Carol Anderson, animating impulses, The Appalachian Trail, Appomattox, asymmetric polarization, Peter Baker, Steve Bannon, Bob Barnett, beleaguered officials, Joe Biden, Joan Biskupic, Kate Boo, George H.W. Bush, Robert Caro, Jimmy Carter, Jesus Christ, Julie Davis, drop-down menus, enabling environments, farm foremen, The Federal Reserve, Craig Fehrman, Foreign Policy magazine, full absorption, Susan Glasser, Garret Graff, Lindsay Graham, Alan Greenspan, Stephanie Grisham, Maggie Haberman, Susan Hennessey, Fiona Hill, Dustin Hoffman, holy crap anecdotes, David Ignatius, joining-ness, Jurassic Park, Bob Kaiser, Ibram X. Kendi, the Kerner Commission, Adam Kushner, Robert E. Lee, Joe Lieberman, Steve Luxenberg, Thomas Mann, David Maraniss, Mark Meadows, mid-level authoritarian regimes, military duds, Mark Milley, Robert Moses, Robert Mueller, murdered darlings, murky institutions, The New York Review of Books, Kirstjen Nielsen, Notre Dame, Barack Obama, obligatory campaign memoirs, obscene crescendos, Norm Ornstein, parallel histories, the paralysis of power, George Pataki, Tim Pawlenty, policy wonks, John Pomfret, Robert Redford, Marco Rubio, Mark Sanford, Michael Schaffer, Brent Scowcroft, Michael Shear, silent Moscow, John Sununu, Barton Swaim, targeted excerpts, Mark Twain, Mario Vargas Llosa, velociraptors, Scott Walker, Ben Wittes, Michael Wolff, Bob Woodward...& more!