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‘Turn Every Page’: How a famous literary team has shaped history for 50 years

“Turn Every Page” is about the relationship between a writer and his editor. This might seem like a musty subject for a documentary. But what if the editor was Robert Gottlieb, who has worked with some of the most celebrated writers of the 20th century? It was he who convinced Joseph Heller to change the title of “Catch-18” to “Catch-22” because, among other reasons, it sounded funnier. 

And what if the writer was the legendary political historian Robert Caro? These men have collaborated since the 1970s, when Caro’s “The Power Broker” – his Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of the autocratic New York City urban planner Robert Moses – became an instant classic.

Since then, over a 50-year span, Caro has produced four volumes of his massive, multipart biography of President Lyndon B. Johnson. The fifth and final volume is apparently about one-third completed.

Why We Wrote This

The literary team of Robert Gottlieb and Robert Caro has shaped history with the books they’ve produced together. A new documentary, “Turn Every Page,” engagingly captures a partnership that’s endured for five decades.

Caro’s slow-going thoroughness raises the unavoidable question that the men repeatedly and bemusedly confront: Will they both live long enough to complete the collaboration? Caro is currently 87, Gottlieb, 91. 

Not that the film, directed by Lizzie Gottlieb, Robert’s daughter, is some whimsical wheeze about two codgers trying to eke out a last hurrah. Both men come across as never less than spry. “Turn Every Page” is a testament to how the life of the mind is its own elixir. These men love what they do because they understand its importance. Caro’s mission in his books has always been to document the effects of power on the powerless. He gives a voice to marginalized people in society who are often bypassed in standard historical tomes. He takes so long because, as he says, “I want the books to endure.” 

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