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Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty

by Anderson Cooper, Katherine Howe

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
6492137,337 (3.78)8
Showing 21 of 21
Cooper is a remarkably sensitive and engaging writer. This history of the ultra-rich Vanderbilt family is structured as a collection of episodes, much like a short story collection built around a theme. And as with such a collection, some of the "stories" are more resonant than others. I particularly enjoyed chapter 4, which is a virtual skeleton key to television's The Gilded Age, and chapter 11, about the social downfall of Truman Capote. But all the chapters are interesting, and together, like all great portraits of great American families, they say some important things about our country and how it became what it is. ( )
  john.cooper | May 31, 2024 |
Really enjoyed this book which is essentially a biography but written by a direct descendent with many interesting insights. ( )
  jsfecmd | May 26, 2024 |
It was a good book but shallow. ( )
  Ferg.ma | Apr 13, 2024 |
A tale of the gilded age brought forward from the 17th century through the gilded age ending in the 21st century. Anderson Cooper and his co-author are both personally tied to the history of this legendary family. Choosing several characters and one branch of the tree to follow made an otherwise overwhelming dynasty navigable. The anecdotes were well told with delightful descriptions of the extravagant homes and wardrobes. If you enjoy gilded age drama, there is plenty of that to satisfy your curiosity. Overall it is a story of avarice, corruption and great emotional trauma for some of the descendants born into this self-made aristocracy. ( )
  beebeereads | Mar 23, 2024 |
Book on CD read by Anderson Cooper
3.5***

Subtitle: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty

Cooper, the son of “the last Vanderbilt” (Gloria Vanderbilt), and a trained journalist, looks at the family legacy in this work of nonfiction.

There have been many books written about this uber wealthy family of the gilded age. Usually, the books have focused on one or two of the generations from Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt to his children and grandchildren. Cooper tries to encapsulate the history of his family in its entirety.

Unfortunately, there is so much information about the family that we get only glimpses of some of the more colorful members. His focus seems to be on how the Commodore accumulated so much wealth (and why doing so was so all-encompassing for him), and how his descendants managed to squander it all away.

Dysfunctional family with a capital ‘D’! The rich ARE different. He spends some time countering the book (and TV miniseries) made about his mother, Little Gloria, Happy At Last, relating the “true story” behind some of the dramatized scenes.

On the whole, it held my attention, and I learned a few tidbits I hadn’t previously come across.

The text comes with many photos. The ones printed in the center of the book all have captions, but the photos on the front and back cover, and on the front and back endpapers have no captions, so the reader is left to puzzle out who these people might be.

Cooper does a fine job of reading the book. He is, after all, invested in the story. ( )
  BookConcierge | Jan 22, 2024 |
3.5 stars
I listened to the audio version (Anderson Cooper reads) and I enjoyed this very much. If you have any interest in the Gilded Age in NY (or the HBO series), the first part of the book is an interesting look at how the Vanderbilts operated and excelled in that social caste. Later on there is a chapter on the America's Cup sailing race and a bit on rise and fall of Truman Capote. Overall it is a fascinating trip through the history of the wealthy society in NYC. ( )
  ellink | Jan 22, 2024 |
ANDERSON IS A CNN PERSONALITY AND THE SON OF ONE OF HER HUSBANDS. IT IS A GOOD SUMMARY OF LIFE AMONG THE RICH AND WOULD MAKE A GOOD TOUR BOOK OF ALL THE PLACES WHERE THEY LIVED. ( )
  pgabj | Oct 18, 2023 |
If you're interested in the Gilded Age and nouveau riche this is a great book. It was really interesting reading about the rise to wealth of the family. The extravagance and opulence that they lived among and created are mind-blowing. Also mindblowing is the fact that so little of this great empire exists today. It is a star-studded cast of characters told from a removed but insider voice of Anderson Cooper. It probably deserves a higher rating because it is very well done I just am not sure that I cared all that much about the rise and fall of the family as much as others might. ( )
  MsTera | Oct 10, 2023 |
This book surprised me. I really borrowed it because I have so much respect for Anderson Cooper. I have very little interest in the stories of rich people, including Cooper’s family, the famous Vanderbilts. I had read one of Anderson’s previous books, “The Rainbow Comes and Goes: A Mother and Son on Life, Love, and Loss,” and on the strength of that book, I thought I would take a chance on this one. I’m glad I did. I listened to the audio version of the book, narrated beautifully by Anderson Cooper. Anderson was in the process of adopting his first son, Wyatt, while writing this book. He said that friends and acquaintances constantly asked him if he was going to give Wyatt, who was named for Anderson’s father, the middle name Vanderbilt. His response, “I never considered naming him Vanderbilt.” And when someone asked him how it felt to be a member of one of the richest, most powerful families in the history of this country, he said, “I’m a Cooper, not a Vanderbilt.” What I found extremely interesting about this book was what I learned about the life and times of the culture the Vanderbilts, the Astors, and the rest of that world they lived in. A sideline was an interesting section on Truman Capote. I learned several things about him I didn’t know, including what led to his downfall: an ill advised article he wrote for Esquire Magazine in 1975, “La Cote Basque—1965.” In that article he exposed many of the embarrassing stories behind the gossip about the rich and famous at the time. He claimed it was “thinly disguised,” but it was anything but that, and everyone mentioned in the piece as well as those who were friends and family of those people, cut Capote off. His masterpiece, “In Cold Blood” put him on the map and made him the center of the A list on both coasts. “La Cote Basque” knocked him off…permanently. Cooper wrote this book with novelist Katherine Howe, and I’m not sure how much Anderson actually wrote. The writing is masterfully written whoever wrote it. I highly recommend “The Vanderbilts: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty.” ( )
  FormerEnglishTeacher | Oct 7, 2023 |
I tried to grab something useful of this book. I don't just read for the sake of reading, from every book i try to find sthg to enrich myself a little.
The introduction is good, i'll give'em that. Further in, to the point where the Commodore's offspring are fighting each other over the will, still good. The rest of it is just.. ( )
  NG_YbL | Jul 12, 2023 |
Anderson Cooper writes about his mother's family, the Vanderbilts. Over the course of 8 generations, they came to New Amsterdam from The Netherlands, started farming and ferrying, and eventually built a huge fortune and squandered it on their lavish lifestyles. The women of the family are especially interesting and terrifying as they attempt to marry off their daughters, build ever bigger houses and throw parties to compete with the other families in "The 400." Cooper seems to have a good understanding of his mother and how her early trauma made her the way she was. Money does not guarantee happiness. ( )
  mojomomma | Dec 13, 2022 |
Listened to the audiobook.... Great narration by Anderson Cooper. ( )
  yukon92 | Sep 21, 2022 |
I thought this book was good, but it focused on the gossipy/drama part of the Vanderbilt family and didn't provide nearly any information about how that fortune was gained in the first place. (I realize there are probably a ton of other books on the topic, but I was hoping to learn about it here.) ( )
  lemontwist | Aug 16, 2022 |
Mostly interesting history of this wealthy American dynasty. ( )
  EllenH | Jun 29, 2022 |
I listened to the audiobook edition, narrated by the author Anderson Cooper, Gloria Vanderbilt’s son.
It’s a mildly interesting account of the lives of several members of the family beginning with Cornelius (The Commodore) Vanderbilt and his large family of 13 children. The Commodore started making his fortune early on by operation a small ferry from Staten Island. This expanded to steamships and railroads. How was worth $105 million when he died in 1877. Vanderbilt University in Tenessee is named after him.
Cooper highlights the most influential and peculiar members of the family and discusses the family mansions in New York and the Breakers in Rhode Island. the parties, yachts, marriages, mistresses, children, scandals, alcoholism, publicity, infighting and snobbery that infiltrated the family.
He discusses the trauma that his mother Gloria endured as a nine year old at the centre of the custody battle between her mother Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt and Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney.
Interesting story. ( )
  MaggieFlo | May 26, 2022 |
I haven't quite finished the book yet, but I don't think anything in the last few chapters will change my opinion. I was thoroughly disgusted by the shallowness of the lives of these ultra-wealthy people. They seemed to have no thought of actually contributing something to the world beyond entertaining on an astoundingly lavish scale and building bigger and better homes to outdo their peers. Where's the work ethic? Where's the social conscience? Where's the desire to do something worthwhile with their vast fortunes? At least Carnegie built libraries all over the country with his money. Even the Sackler family of Oxycontin fame donated millions (billions?) to museums and other public institutions around the world. (Those institutions are now embarrassed to have accepted their tainted money, but that's another story.) This book seems like a thorough condemnation of the Vanderbilts to me; am I missing something?; is it too one-sided?

Ah yes, Ellie, I DID forget about Vanderbilt University, but that was founded by the Commodore who also worked hard to make the fortune in the first place. (And I can't help thinking about the fact that the university was a monument to southern gentility which the Confederacy had tried to preserve on the backs of slave labor). The Commodore's son also added to the fortune with his business in railroads, but the heirs after that were a sorry lot. Maybe I can spare a bit of sympathy for their unhappy lives and view them as a life lesson -- not that I or anyone in my family will ever be faced with the question of what to do with our millions. The Dalai Lama and Desmond Tutu tell us that joy comes to our lives when we think not of ourselves but of others (The Book of Joy). I didn't think about the author's motivation in writing this book until I realized that Anderson Cooper's mother was Gloria Vanderbilt. Then I could understand why she was treated more sympathetically than the rest of the family. Also, do I suspect a hint of spite in his story? ( )
  NMBookClub | Apr 14, 2022 |
I knew little about the Vanderbilts until I read Anderson Cooper’s enlightening exploration of his family’s twist- filled legacy. In many respects, it was a lively lesson in American history that shed light on numerous eras, the rise of some business icons and the pitfalls that can come with accumulated wealth. Some of the sections went on a bit too long for my liking – including one too many extravagant balls/parties. Then again, this a biography of the Vanderbilt family. Overall, I found Cooper’s work interesting and well worth my time. ( )
  brianinbuffalo | Jan 2, 2022 |
Good. Not as good as The Rainbow Comes and Goes. Would have liked even more photos. ( )
  cherybear | Nov 24, 2021 |
Purchased for trip which included Vanderbilt Mansion in Hyde Park. Mildly entertaining. ( )
  mlhershey | Oct 18, 2021 |
I've always had a fascination with the Vanderbilt family and was excited to see this book by Anderson Cooper, CNN anchor and a member of the most recent generation of Vanderbilts. I purchased the audiobook, and it did not disappoint. I finished it in two days--a testament to how engaging the story is and to Cooper as a reader.

Cooper begins with Cornelius Vanderbilt, the family patriarch who was known as "The Commodore." He worked on his father's ferry as a boy and, with a loan from his mother, purchased his own boat when only a teenager. It was he whop made the family fortune in shipping and railroads. Cooper makes a brief digression a few chapters later to take us back to the first family member to emigrate to New York from the Netherlands. He arrived as an indentured servant in 1650. Like many immigrant families, the Vanderbilts struggled through generations until The Commodore rose to the top of American industry and commerce. Love him or hate him (and many certainly hated him), he was one heck of a self-0made man.

The Vanderbilts did not lead a charmed life. The Commodore had thirteen children but discounted his nine daughters and wrote off two of his sons in his will. One son died young, another suffered from epilepsy and was for a time confined to a mental institution, and a third was rejected as a "wastrel"--a drinker with debts. That left his son Billy and Billy's four sons to inherit most of the Vanderbilt fortune. Although they reigned at the top of New York high society for decades, the family history is riddled with multiple divorces, scandals, suicides, alcoholism, and tragedies, including one son who went down with the Lusitania. Cooper spares no details. It wasn't until near her death that his mother, Gloria Vanderbilt, began to talk abut her troubled childhood and the infamous legal case in which her paternal aunt and her mother battled over her custody. Gloria was estranged from her mother until shortly before her death; she considered her nurse, nicknamed Dodo, as her mother, even fantasizing that she was her biological mother, and she never forgave her mother or her aunt for agreeing to fire Dodo. She and Anderson suffered through the early death of his father, Wyatt Cooper, from cancer and his brother Carter's suicide at the age of 23; Anderson was in the room when he jumped from the family's 14th-story apartment window.

Part of Cooper's purpose in revealing so much about his family is to let the public know that money does not always bring happiness--nor does it last. While he acknowledges that the Vanderbilt name opened doors for him along the way, by the time his father died, there was no fortune left for Gloria or for her sons to inherit. Gloria had to work hard and make her own way in the world through modeling, fashion design, and a home decor line. Sadly, she retained her Vanderbilt tastes and went through any money she earned like it was water. Cooper himself earned spare cash as a teenager by modelling and says that early on he did his best never to let people know about his Vanderbilt background.

This is a fascinating portrait of an extraordinarily successful and extraordinarily flowed family, told candidly by one of the last Vanderbilt descendants with great personal insight but empathy by one of the last Vanderbilt descendants. If you love family sagas or reading about Old New York or Hollywood society, or just have a curiosity about the lives of a renowned American family, this is one you won't want to miss. ( )
1 vote Cariola | Sep 26, 2021 |
read2023
  AbneyLibri | Jul 22, 2023 |
Showing 21 of 21

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