(no subject)
Aug. 25th, 2009 11:09 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
For some reason, I am completely fascinated by is California history. I don't know why! I went to college in California, which was fun, but I never felt a super-strong connection to the area and I don't really want to go back on a long-term basis or anything. Still, for some reason, if you set a story in early California I am pretty much guaranteed to sit up and pay attention. And then start dorking out all over the history and kind of forget about the need for the plot to make sense. Uh.
(I mean, part of it is obviously that California history is super fascinating, but it's not like everywhere else's history isn't fascinating also! HISTORY IS COOL, GUYS. /end dorkout.)
Fiction authors that I love for their bits of California history include:
Kage Baker! Kage Baker is a double whammy for me because she is super enthusiastic about California history AND about Tudor England, and in almost all of her books she is prone to taking long rambly digressions from the plot to tell you about THIS TOTALLY COOL THING THAT HAPPENED IN CALIFORNIA THAT TIME, dude, isn't it crazy! Mendoza in Hollywood is maybe the best for this, but California history is woven all throughout her books and it is a large part of the reason I adore her. (Warning that Sky Coyote starts out seriously faily, but gets much better!)
Isabel Allende - I sometimes find the main characters in her Daughter of Fortune and Portrait in Sepia kind of bland, but I don't even care because her portrait of 19th-century California is so fascinating!
Laurence Yep - almost all his books that are not set in fantasyland are set in San Francisco, and he knows his stuff. I really need to read his Golden Mountain chronicles, which follow a Chinese family through San Francisco history.
Ysabeau Wilce - her Flora Segunda books are totally fantasyland, so this doesn't quite fit into the 'history' category, but - it's fantasyland California! WHICH IS SO AWESOME, and something I don't think I've ever seen anyone else do, at least not believably.
Nonfictionwise,
nextian recently recced me Frances Dinkelspiel's Towers of Gold: How One Jewish Immigrant Named Isaias Hellman Created California as a good book on California history, and it is a seriously cool read. I mean, as far as early California Big Names go, Isaias Hellman was pretty short on scandalous gossip - he was an extremely respectable banker! He loved his wife and kids! It is ever so slightly possible that he may have been associated with some people who bribed the mayor one time! - but it nonetheless seriously fascinating, both in terms of Jewish history (Hellman was part of a large group of Jewish immigrants who were friends and relatives back home, and helped each other out as they started forming GINORMOUSLY SUCCESSFUL businesses in the States) and as a portrait of the development of Los Angeles and San Francisco from a couple of hastily-thrown-up gold-rush towns to the giant, overdeveloped cities that we know and love today. The change over the sixty years that Hellman lived and worked in California is kind of incredible - you get the era of stagecoach robberies and a murder-a-day in LA, the San Francisco earthquake, the founding of the electric companies, WWI, all together.
I am definitely on the lookout for more books of California history, and I am also on the lookout for more fiction books that are full of California history - so, flist, I have two requests for you today. Either rec me books, fiction or nonfiction, that are awesome for California-history dorkouts, or tell me about a period of history that fills you with your own history-kink dorky joy, and I will see if I can rec you anything likewise!
(I mean, part of it is obviously that California history is super fascinating, but it's not like everywhere else's history isn't fascinating also! HISTORY IS COOL, GUYS. /end dorkout.)
Fiction authors that I love for their bits of California history include:
Kage Baker! Kage Baker is a double whammy for me because she is super enthusiastic about California history AND about Tudor England, and in almost all of her books she is prone to taking long rambly digressions from the plot to tell you about THIS TOTALLY COOL THING THAT HAPPENED IN CALIFORNIA THAT TIME, dude, isn't it crazy! Mendoza in Hollywood is maybe the best for this, but California history is woven all throughout her books and it is a large part of the reason I adore her. (Warning that Sky Coyote starts out seriously faily, but gets much better!)
Isabel Allende - I sometimes find the main characters in her Daughter of Fortune and Portrait in Sepia kind of bland, but I don't even care because her portrait of 19th-century California is so fascinating!
Laurence Yep - almost all his books that are not set in fantasyland are set in San Francisco, and he knows his stuff. I really need to read his Golden Mountain chronicles, which follow a Chinese family through San Francisco history.
Ysabeau Wilce - her Flora Segunda books are totally fantasyland, so this doesn't quite fit into the 'history' category, but - it's fantasyland California! WHICH IS SO AWESOME, and something I don't think I've ever seen anyone else do, at least not believably.
Nonfictionwise,
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
I am definitely on the lookout for more books of California history, and I am also on the lookout for more fiction books that are full of California history - so, flist, I have two requests for you today. Either rec me books, fiction or nonfiction, that are awesome for California-history dorkouts, or tell me about a period of history that fills you with your own history-kink dorky joy, and I will see if I can rec you anything likewise!
no subject
Date: 2009-08-26 02:54 am (UTC)Octavia Butler's Wild Seed has some pretty fascinating colonial America stuff mixed in with the telapathic plotline - the first half of the book takes place in the 1600s, and the main characters live for a while in a colonial village.
I read The Last Witchfinger a few years back - I remember having mixed feelings about parts of it, but the colonial America stuff is very well-done and well-researched, and it is partly narrated by a copy of Newton's Principia Mathematica, which is basically just an awesome mode of storytelling. And Benjamin Franklin features as a love interest! SPEAKING OF, apparently there is a series of mystery books where Benjamin Franklin FIGHTS CRIME. I cannot rec because I have not read, but my feeling on this is that I must hunt it down immediately!
Obviously if you have not seen the musical 1776, go out and rent it AT ONCE, because it is amazing.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-26 04:33 pm (UTC)I love it.
Also, please find this Ben Franklin as a crime-fighter book. I must have it.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-26 04:39 pm (UTC)BENJAMIN FRANKLIN TAKES THE CASE *_* *_* *_*
no subject
Date: 2009-08-26 04:43 pm (UTC)My library has it! Once I've worked my way through the Diana Wynne Jones oeuvre (thanks for your GIANT LIST, by the way. There are a few I hadn't read because they were out of print when I was a kid and my library didn't have them).
no subject
Date: 2009-08-26 04:48 pm (UTC)EVERYONE MUST READ ALL DWJ *cough* Uh, I mean, I am very glad that it was helpful! :D