Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
First published in 1971 when the late Daley was mayor of Chicago, this classic ``provides a detailed and, for some, eye-opening account of Daley's rise to absolute control of the Chicago Democratic political machine,'' said PW , finding the book ``sardonic and sometimes hilarious reading.'' (September)
Studs Terkel
Stunning, astonishing, mythshattering!
Studs Terkel, New York Times Book Review
John Barkham
Without question the most devastating dissection of a personal municipal fief I've ever read…brilliant!
John Barkham, Saturday Review Syndicate
From the Publisher
"The best book ever written about an American city, by the best journalist of his time. Perhaps it will stand as the best book ever written about the American condition at this time. It comes at you from the saloons and neighborhoods, the police stations and political backrooms. It is about lies and viciousness, about the worship of cement and the hatred toward blacks, about troubling cowardice that hides behind religion and patriotism while the poor get clubbed and killed.
Royko’s book also does more written damage to a man than perhaps anything I have ever read.
I know of no place where it will not be read and quoted and kept and read again."
Jimmy Breslin
“A pungent and precise portrait of how big-city politics work. And it is brisk and lively reading in the bargain.
Muckraking at its best, a remorseless book that bites and tears.”
— Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, The New York Times
“There’s nobody better than Mike Royko writing politics anywhere in the country today. About the book? It’s Daley; Royko’s got him to the life. And it’s Chicago. Even if you’ve never been there you know it’s Chicago. A fine job.”
—Russell Baker, The New York Times
"Stunning, astonishing, myth-shattering!"
Studs Terkel, New York Times Book Review
"Without question the most devastating dissection of a personal municipal fief I've ever read
Brilliant!"
John Barkham, Saturday Review Syndicate
"A great book
Chicago and the lesser towns that make up urban America may or may not die. But you won't understand why they hurst so much until you read Boss."
The Washington Post